• Title/Summary/Keyword: security key

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Obliquely incident earthquake for soil-structure interaction in layered half space

  • Zhao, Mi;Gao, Zhidong;Wang, Litao;Du, Xiuli;Huang, Jingqi;Li, Yang
    • Earthquakes and Structures
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    • v.13 no.6
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    • pp.573-588
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    • 2017
  • The earthquake input is required when the soil-structure interaction (SSI) analysis is performed by the direct finite element method. In this paper, the earthquake is considered as the obliquely incident plane body wave arising from the truncated linearly elastic layered half space. An earthquake input method is developed for the time-domain three-dimensional SSI analysis. It consists of a new site response analysis method for free field and the viscous-spring artificial boundary condition for scattered field. The proposed earthquake input method can be implemented in the process of building finite element model of commercial software. It can result in the highly accurate solution by using a relatively small SSI model. The initial condition is considered for the nonlinear SSI analysis. The Daikai subway station is analyzed as an example. The effectiveness of the proposed earthquake input method is verified. The effect of the obliquely incident earthquake is studied.

Quantum Authentication and Key Distribution protocol based on one-time ID (일회용 ID 기반 양자 인증 및 키 분배 프로토롤)

  • Lee Hwa-Yean;Hong Chang-Ho;Lim Jong-in;Yang Hyung-Jin
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.73-80
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    • 2005
  • We propose a Quantum Authentication and Key distribution protocol based on one-time n using one-way Hash function. The designated users can authenticate each other and the arbitrator using their one-time ID and distribute a quantum secret key using remained GHZ states after authentication procedure. Though the help of the arbitrator is needed in the process of authentication and key distribution, our protocol prevents the arbitrator from finding out the shared secret key even if the arbitrator becomes an active attacker. Unconditional security can be proved in our protocol as the other QKD protocols.

Provable Security of PRF-based Key Derivation Functions according to Input Types of Counters (PRF-기반 키유도함수에서 카운터 입력 형태에 따른 증명가능 안전성)

  • Kim, Nayoung;Kang, Ju-Sung;Yeom, Yongjin
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.547-557
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    • 2015
  • The security of all cryptographic algorithms and protocols is based on the confidentiality of secret keys. Key management mechanism is an indispensable part of the cryptographic system and this deals with the generation, exchange, storage, use, and replacement of keys. Within the key management mechanism there are key derivation functions (KDFs) which derive one or more keys from a master key. NIST specifies three families of PRF-based KDFs in SP 800-108. In this paper, we examine the difference of security models between the KDFs and the encryption modes of operations. Moreover we focus on the provable security of PRF-based KDFs according to input types of counters, and show that the counter and feedback modes of KDFs using XOR of counters are insecure, while these modes using concatenation of counters are secure.

Improved Related-key Attack against Recent Lightweight Block Cipher PRINCE (최신 경량 블록 암호 PRINCE에 대한 향상된 연관키 공격)

  • Ju, Wangho;An, Hyunjung;Yi, Okyeon;Kang, Ju-Sung;Kim, Jongsung
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.445-451
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    • 2014
  • The related-key attack is regarded as one of the important cryptanalytic tools for the security evaluation of block ciphers. This is due to the fact that this attack can be effectively applied to schemes like block-cipher based hash functions whose block-cipher keys can be controlled as their messages. In this paper, we improve the related-key attack on lightweight block cipher PRINCE proposed in FSE 2013. Our improved related-key attack on PRINCE reduces data complexity from $2^{33}$ [4] to 2.

Grid-Based Key Pre-Distribution in Wireless Sensor Networks

  • Mohaisen, Abedelaziz;Nyang, Dae-Hun;Maeng, Young-Jae;Lee, Kyung-Hee;Hong, Do-Won
    • KSII Transactions on Internet and Information Systems (TIIS)
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    • v.3 no.2
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    • pp.195-208
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    • 2009
  • In this paper, we introduce a grid-based key pre-distribution scheme in wireless sensor networks, which aims to improve the connectivity and resiliency while maintaining a reasonable overhead. We consider simplification of the key establishment logic and enhancement of the connectivity via plat polynomial assignment on a three-dimensional grid for node allocation and keying material assignment. We demonstrate that our scheme results in improvements via a detailed discussion on the connectivity, resource usage, security features and resiliency. A comparison with other relevant works from the literature along with a demonstrated implementation on typical sensor nodes shows the feasibility of the introduced scheme and its applicability for large networks.

Improved Group Key Exchange Scheme Secure Against Session-State Reveal Attacks (세션상태 정보 노출 공격에 안전한 개선된 그룹 키 교환 프로토콜)

  • Kim, Ki-Tak;Kwon, Jeong-Ok;Hong, Do-Won;Lee, Dong-Hoon
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.18 no.3
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    • pp.3-8
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    • 2008
  • Ephemeral data are easily revealed if state specific information is stored in insecure memory or a random number generator is corrupted. In this letter, we show that Nam et al.'s group key agreement scheme, which is an improvement of Bresson et al.'s scheme, is not secure against session-state reveal attacks. We then propose an improvement to fix the security flaw.

The Secure Key Store to prevent leakage accident of a Private Key and a Certificate (인증서와 개인키 유출 방지를 위한 보안키 저장소 Secure Key Store)

  • Park, Young-Jin;Kim, Seon-Jong;Lee, Dong-Hoon
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Information Security & Cryptology
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    • v.24 no.1
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    • pp.31-40
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    • 2014
  • In Korea, the Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) has been introduced. For secure information transmission and identification, the electronic signature authorization system of a certificate-based is built, and then the service provide.The certificate is stored in location what users can easily access and copy. Thus, there is a risk that can be stolen by malware or web account hacking. In addition, private key passwords can be exposed by the logging tool, after keyboard security features are disabled. Each of these security weaknesses is a potential conduit for identity theft, property/asset theft, and theft of the actual certificates. The present study proposes a method to prevent the private key file access illegally. When a certificate is stored, the private key is encrypted by the dependent element of the device, and it is stored securely. If private key leakage occurs, the retrieved key could not be used on other devices.

Dynamic Session Key based Pairwise Key Management Scheme for Wireless Sensor Networks

  • Premamayudu, B;Rao, Koduganti Venkata;Varma, P. Suresh
    • KSII Transactions on Internet and Information Systems (TIIS)
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    • v.10 no.12
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    • pp.5596-5615
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    • 2016
  • Security is one of the major challenges in the Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs). WSNs are more vulnerable to adversarial activities. All cryptographic security services indirectly depend on key management. Symmetric key management is the best key establishment process for WSNs due to the resource constraints of the sensors. In this paper, we proposed dynamic session key establishment scheme based on randomly generated nonce value and sensor node identity, in which each sensor node is equipped with session key on expire basis. The proposed scheme is compare with five popular existing key management systems. Our scheme is simulated in OMNET++ with MixiM and presented experimental results. The analytical study and experimental results show the superiority of the proposed scheme over the existing schemes in terms of energy, storage, resilience and communication overhead.

Recoverable Private Key Scheme for Consortium Blockchain Based on Verifiable Secret Sharing

  • Li, Guojia;You, Lin;Hu, Gengran;Hu, Liqin
    • KSII Transactions on Internet and Information Systems (TIIS)
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    • v.15 no.8
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    • pp.2865-2878
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    • 2021
  • As a current popular technology, the blockchain has a serious issue: the private key cannot be retrieved due to force majeure. Since the outcome of the blockchain-based Bitcoin, there have been many occurrences of the users who lost or forgot their private keys and could not retrieve their token wallets, and it may cause the permanent loss of their corresponding blockchain accounts, resulting in irreparable losses for the users. We propose a recoverable private key scheme for consortium blockchain based on the verifiable secret sharing which can enable the user's private key in the consortium blockchain to be securely recovered through a verifiable secret sharing method. In our secret sharing scheme, users use the biometric keys to encrypt shares, and the preset committer peers in the consortium blockchain act as the participants to store the users' private key shares. Due to the particularity of the biometric key, only the user can complete the correct secret recovery. Our comparisons with the existing mnemonic systems or the multi-signature schemes have shown that our scheme can allow users to recover their private keys without storing the passwords accurately. Hence, our scheme can improve the account security and recoverability of the data-sharing systems across physical and virtual platforms that use blockchain technology.

A Novel Method for Survivability Test Based on End Nodes in Large Scale Network

  • Ming, Liang;Zhao, Gang;Wang, Dongxia;Huang, Minhuan;Li, Xiang;Miao, Qing;Xu, Fei
    • KSII Transactions on Internet and Information Systems (TIIS)
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.620-636
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    • 2015
  • Survivability is a necessary property of network system in disturbed environment. Recovery ability is a key actor of survivability. This paper concludes network survivability into a novel composite metric, i.e. Network Recovery Degree (NRD). In order to measure this metric in quantity, a concept of Source-Destination Pair (SD Pair), is created to abstract end-to-end activity based on end nodes in network, and the quality of SD Pair is also used to describe network performance, such as connectivity, quality of service, link degree, and so on. After that, a Survivability Test method in large scale Network based on SD pairs, called STNSD, is provided. How to select SD Pairs effectively in large scale network is also provided. We set up simulation environment to validate the test method in a severe destroy scenario and evaluate the method scalability in different large scale network scenarios. Experiment and analysis shows that the metric NRD correctly reflects the effort of different survivability strategy, and the proposed test method STNSD has good scalability and can be used to test and evaluate quantitative survivability in large scale network.