Authenticating Pervasive Devices with Human Protocols (2005)
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BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Juels05authenticatingpervasive,
author = {Ari Juels and Stephen A. Weis},
title = {Authenticating Pervasive Devices with Human Protocols},
booktitle = {},
year = {2005},
pages = {293--308},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag}
}
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Abstract
Abstract. Forgery and counterfeiting are emerging as serious security risks in low-cost pervasive computing devices. These devices lack the computational, storage, power, and communication resources necessary for most cryptographic authentication schemes. Surprisingly, low-cost pervasive devices like Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags share similar capabilities with another weak computing device: people. These similarities motivate the adoption of techniques from humancomputer security to the pervasive computing setting. This paper analyzes a particular human-to-computer authentication protocol designed by Hopper and Blum (HB), and shows it to be practical for low-cost pervasive devices. We offer an improved, concrete proof of security for the HB protocol against passive adversaries. This paper also offers a new, augmented version of the HB protocol, named HB +, that is secure against active adversaries. The HB + protocol is a novel, symmetric authentication protocol with a simple, low-cost implementation. We prove the security of the HB + protocol against active adversaries based on the hardness of the Learning Parity with Noise (LPN) problem.







