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2018-02-27
Canetti, R., Hogan, K., Malhotra, A., Varia, M..  2017.  A Universally Composable Treatment of Network Time. 2017 IEEE 30th Computer Security Foundations Symposium (CSF). :360–375.
The security of almost any real-world distributed system today depends on the participants having some "reasonably accurate" sense of current real time. Indeed, to name one example, the very authenticity of practically any communication on the Internet today hinges on the ability of the parties to accurately detect revocation of certificates, or expiration of passwords or shared keys.,,However, as recent attacks show, the standard protocols for determining time are subvertible, resulting in wide-spread security loss. Worse yet, we do not have security notions for network time protocols that (a) can be rigorously asserted, and (b) rigorously guarantee security of applications that require a sense of real time.,,We propose such notions, within the universally composable (UC) security framework. That is, we formulate ideal functionalities that capture a number of prevalent forms of time measurement within existing systems. We show how they can be realized by real-world protocols, and how they can be used to assert security of time-reliant applications - specifically, certificates with revocation and expiration times. This allows for relatively clear and modular treatment of the use of time consensus in security-sensitive systems.,,Our modeling and analysis are done within the existing UC framework, in spite of its asynchronous, event-driven nature. This allows incorporating the use of real time within the existing body of analytical work done in this framework. In particular it allows for rigorous incorporation of real time within cryptographic tools and primitives.
2015-05-06
Zhuo Hao, Yunlong Mao, Sheng Zhong, Li, L.E., Haifan Yao, Nenghai Yu.  2014.  Toward Wireless Security without Computational Assumptions #x2014;Oblivious Transfer Based on Wireless Channel Characteristics. Computers, IEEE Transactions on. 63:1580-1593.

Wireless security has been an active research area since the last decade. A lot of studies of wireless security use cryptographic tools, but traditional cryptographic tools are normally based on computational assumptions, which may turn out to be invalid in the future. Consequently, it is very desirable to build cryptographic tools that do not rely on computational assumptions. In this paper, we focus on a crucial cryptographic tool, namely 1-out-of-2 oblivious transfer. This tool plays a central role in cryptography because we can build a cryptographic protocol for any polynomial-time computable function using this tool. We present a novel 1-out-of-2 oblivious transfer protocol based on wireless channel characteristics, which does not rely on any computational assumption. We also illustrate the potential broad applications of this protocol by giving two applications, one on private communications and the other on privacy preserving password verification. We have fully implemented this protocol on wireless devices and conducted experiments in real environments to evaluate the protocol. Our experimental results demonstrate that it has reasonable efficiency.