Rethinking Public Key Infrastructures and Digital Certificates

Rethinking Public Key Infrastructures and Digital Certificates

This book proposes highly practical cryptographic building blocks that can be used to design privacy-protecting electronic communication and transaction systems.

Tag(s): Cryptography

Publication date: 01 Aug 2000

ISBN-10: 0262024918

ISBN-13: 0262024918

Paperback: 356 pages

Views: 18,709

Type: Book

Publisher: The MIT Press

License: n/a

Post time: 11 Oct 2006 08:02:31

Rethinking Public Key Infrastructures and Digital Certificates

Rethinking Public Key Infrastructures and Digital Certificates This book proposes highly practical cryptographic building blocks that can be used to design privacy-protecting electronic communication and transaction systems.
Tag(s): Cryptography
Publication date: 01 Aug 2000
ISBN-10: 0262024918
ISBN-13: 0262024918
Paperback: 356 pages
Views: 18,709
Document Type: Book
Publisher: The MIT Press
License: n/a
Post time: 11 Oct 2006 08:02:31
Terms and Conditions:
Stefan Brands wrote:You are hereby permitted to retrieve, print, and store a single copy of the entire book contents as made available here, for personal use only. This permission does not extend to producing hard copies or electronic copies for (1) general distribution, (2) promotion, (3) creating works, (4) resale, or (5) any uses other than academic or personal use, nor does it extend to making the book contents electronically available yourself.

Book Excerpts:

As paper-based communication and transaction mechanisms are replaced by automated ones, traditional forms of security such as photographs and handwritten signatures are becoming outdated. Most security experts believe that digital certificates offer the best technology for safeguarding electronic communications. They are already widely used for authenticating and encrypting email and software, and eventually will be built into any device or piece of software that must be able to communicate securely.

There is a serious problem, however, with this unavoidable trend: unless drastic measures are taken, everyone will be forced to communicate via what will be the most pervasive electronic surveillance tool ever built. There will also be abundant opportunity for misuse of digital certificates by hackers, unscrupulous employees, government agencies, financial institutions, insurance companies, and so on.

In this book Stefan Brands proposes cryptographic building blocks for the design of digital certificates that preserve privacy without sacrificing security. Such certificates function in much the same way as cinema tickets or subway tokens: anyone can establish their validity and the data they specify, but no more than that. Furthermore, different actions by the same person cannot be linked. Certificate holders have control over what information is disclosed, and to whom. Subsets of the proposed cryptographic building blocks can be used in combination, allowing a cookbook approach to the design of public key infrastructures. Potential applications include electronic cash, electronic postage, digital rights management, pseudonyms for online chat rooms, health care information storage, electronic voting, and even electronic gambling.

Review(s):

Amazon.com

:| "The book is a graduate-level mathematics dissertation for non-standard, unproven cryptographic techniques. Unless you have advanced cryptographic mathematical skills you won't understand the book."

:) "Brands has given clearer and more detailed meanings of personal privacy that I would ever dreamed exist. He then shows how mathematical techniques can protect each facet of privacy, while releasing all the information I must for living in a modern world."
 




About The Author(s)


Dr. Stefan Brands was the founder and CEO of Credentica, a firm specializing in encryption and cryptographic software. There, he helped develop the U-Prove cryptographic technology. Credentica was taken over by Microsoft in early 2008. He and other key colleagues joined Microsoft and have been continuing their work with cryptographic software and U-Prove since then. Mr. Brands is also Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at McGill University, Canada.

Stefan Brands

Dr. Stefan Brands was the founder and CEO of Credentica, a firm specializing in encryption and cryptographic software. There, he helped develop the U-Prove cryptographic technology. Credentica was taken over by Microsoft in early 2008. He and other key colleagues joined Microsoft and have been continuing their work with cryptographic software and U-Prove since then. Mr. Brands is also Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at McGill University, Canada.


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