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Advances in Cryptology — CRYPTO ’92 : 12th Annual International Cryptology Conference, Santa Barbara, California, USA, August 16–20, 1992. Proceedings / edited by Ernest F. Brickell
(Lecture Notes in Computer Science. ISSN:16113349 ; 740)

1st ed. 1993.
出版者 (Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer)
出版年 1993
本文言語 英語
大きさ X, 593 p. 75 illus : online resource
著者標目 Brickell, Ernest F editor
SpringerLink (Online service)
件 名 LCSH:Cryptography
LCSH:Data encryption (Computer science)
LCSH:Coding theory
LCSH:Information theory
LCSH:Database management
LCSH:Discrete mathematics
LCSH:Operating systems (Computers)
FREE:Cryptology
FREE:Coding and Information Theory
FREE:Database Management
FREE:Discrete Mathematics
FREE:Operating Systems
一般注記 Digital Signatures and Identification I -- Provably Unforgeable Signatures -- New Constructions of Fail-Stop Signatures and Lower Bounds -- Provably Secure and Practical Identification Schemes and Corresponding Signature Schemes -- An Efficient Digital Signature Scheme Based on an Elliptic Curve over the Ring Z n -- The Digital Signature Standard -- Designing and Detecting Trapdoors for Discrete Log Cryptosystems -- Response to Comments on the NIST Proposed Digital Signature Standard -- Applications and New Problems -- Wallet Databases with Observers -- Making Electronic Refunds Safer -- Fair Public-Key Cryptosystems -- Pricing via Processing or Combatting Junk Mail -- Secret Sharing I -- On the Information Rate of Secret Sharing Schemes -- New General Lower Bounds on the Information Rate of Secret Sharing Schemes -- Universally Ideal Secret Sharing Schemes -- Theory I -- Perfect Zero-Knowledge Arguments for NP Can Be Based on General Complexity Assumptions -- Low communication 2-prover zero-knowledge proofs for NP -- Invariant Signatures and Non-Interactive Zero-Knowledge Proofs are Equivalent -- On the Discrepancy between Serial and Parallel of Zero-Knowledge Protocols -- Cryptographic Functions -- On the Design of SP Networks from an Information Theoretic Point of View -- Partially-bent functions -- Digital Signatures and Identifcation II -- Practical Approaches to Attaining Security against Adaptively Chosen Ciphertext Attacks -- On the Security of the Permuted Kernel Identification Scheme -- Computational Number Theory -- Massively Parallel Computation of Discrete Logarithms -- A Quadratic Sieve on the n-Dimensional Cube -- Efficient Multiplication on Certain Nonsupersingular Elliptic Curves -- Speeding up Elliptic Cryptosystems by Using a Signed Binary Window Method -- On Generation of Probable Primes by Incremental Search -- Cryptography Education -- Kid Krypto -- Theory II -- On Defining Proofs of Knowledge -- Public Randomness in Cryptography -- Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for Collision-Free Hashing -- Certifying Cryptographic Tools: The Case of Trapdoor Permutations -- Key Distribution -- Protocols for Secret Key Agreement by Public Discussion Based on Common Information -- Perfectly-Secure Key Distribution for Dynamic Conferences -- DES -- Differential Cryptanalysis of the Full 16-round DES -- Iterative Characteristics of DES and s2-DES -- DES is not a Group -- A High-speed DES Implementation for Network Applications -- Secret Sharing II -- Threshold Schemes with Disenrollment -- Non-existence of homomorphic general sharing schemes for some key spaces -- An l-Span Generalized Secret Sharing Scheme -- Rump Session -- Provable Security Against Differential Cryptanalysis -- Content-Addressable Search Engines and DES-like Systems -- FFT-Hash-II is not yet Collision-free
Crypto'92 took place on August 16-20, 1992. It was the twelfth in the series of annual cryptology conferences held on the beautiful campus of the University of California, Santa Barbara. Once again, it was sponsored by the International Association for Cryptologic Research, in cooperation with the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Security and Privacy. The conference ran smoothly, due to the diligent efforts of the g- eral chair, Spyros Magliveras of the University of Nebraska. One of the measures of the success of this series of conferences is represented by the ever increasing number of papers submitted. This year, there were 135 submissions to the c- ference, which represents a new record. Following the practice of recent program comm- tees, the papers received anonymous review. The program committee accepted 38 papers for presentation. In addition, there were two invited presentations, one by Miles Smid on the Digital Signature Standard, and one by Mike Fellows on presenting the concepts of cryptology to elementary-age students. These proceedings contains these 40 papers plus 3 papers that were presented at the Rump Session. I would like to thank all of the authors of the submitted papers and all of the speakers who presented papers. I would like to express my sincere appreciation to the work of the program committee: Ivan Damgard (Aarhus University, Denmark), Odd Goldreich (Technion, Israel), Burt Kaliski (RSA Data Security, USA), Joe Kilian (NEC, USA)
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