Formal to Practical Security Papers Issued from the 2005-2008 French-Japanese Collaboration / [electronic resource] :
edited by Véronique Cortier, Claude Kirchner, Mitsuhiro Okada, Hideki Sakurada.
- 1st ed. 2009.
- VII, 199 p. online resource.
- Security and Cryptology, 5458 2946-1863 ; .
- Security and Cryptology, 5458 .
Formal to Practical Security -- Verification of Security Protocols with a Bounded Number of Sessions Based on Resolution for Rigid Variables -- Validating Integrity for the Ephemerizer's Protocol with CL-Atse -- Computational Semantics for First-Order Logical Analysis of Cryptographic Protocols -- Fake Fingers in Fingerprint Recognition: Glycerin Supersedes Gelatin -- Comparing State Spaces in Automatic Security Protocol Analysis -- Anonymous Consecutive Delegation of Signing Rights: Unifying Group and Proxy Signatures -- Unconditionally Secure Blind Authentication Codes: The Model, Constructions, and Links to Commitment -- New Anonymity Notions for Identity-Based Encryption -- Computationally Sound Formalization of Rerandomizable RCCA Secure Encryption -- Writing an OS Kernel in a Strictly and Statically Typed Language.
This State-of-the-Art Survey contains a collection of papers originating in the French-Japanese Collaboration on Formal to Practical Security that have crystallized around workshops held in Tokyo and Nancy between 2005 and 2008. These publications mirror the importance of the collaborations in the various fields of computer science to solve these problems linked with other sciences and techniques as well as the importance of bridging the formal theory and practical applications. The 10 papers presented address issues set by the global digitization of our society and its impact on social organization like privacy, economics, environmental policies, national sovereignty, as well as medical environments. The contents cover various aspects of security, cryptography, protocols, biometry and static analysis. This book is aimed at researchers interested in new results but it also serves as an entry point for readers interested in this domain.
9783642020025
10.1007/978-3-642-02002-5 doi
Cryptography. Data encryption (Computer science). Computer programming. Pattern recognition systems. Computers and civilization. Data structures (Computer science). Information theory. Biometric identification. Cryptology. Programming Techniques. Automated Pattern Recognition. Computers and Society. Data Structures and Information Theory. Biometrics.