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Secure Group Communications Using Key Graphs (1998)

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by Chung Kei Wong , Mohamed Gouda , Simon S. Lam
Citations:361 - 14 self
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BibTeX

@TECHREPORT{Wong98securegroup,
    author = {Chung Kei Wong and Mohamed Gouda and Simon S. Lam},
    title = {Secure Group Communications Using Key Graphs},
    institution = {},
    year = {1998}
}

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Abstract

Many emerging applications (e.g., teleconference, real-time information services, pay per view, distributed interactive simulation, and collaborative work) are based upon a group communications model, i.e., they require packet delivery from one or more authorized senders to a very large number of authorized receivers. As a result, securing group communications (i.e., providing confidentiality, integrity, and authenticity of messages delivered between group members) will become a critical networking issue. In this paper, we present a novel solution to the scalability problem of group/multicast key management. We formalize the notion of a secure group as a triple (U; K;R) where U denotes a set of users, K a set of keys held by the users, and R a user-key relation. We then introduce key graphs to specify secure groups. For a special class of key graphs, we present three strategies for securely distributing rekey messages after a join/leave, and specify protocols for joining and leaving a...

Citations

581 Kerberos: An authentication service for open network systems - Steiner, Neuman, et al. - 1988
267 A certified digital signature - Merkle - 1989
255 Multicast Routing in Internetworks and Extended LANs - Deering - 1988
216 Iolus: A framework for scalable secure multicasting - Mittra - 1997
209 Key Management for Multicast: Issues and Architectures - Wallner, Harder, et al. - 1999
108 Proxy-based authorization and accounting for distributed systems - NEUMAN - 1991
65 Improving Internet Multicast with Routing Labels - Levine, Garcia-Luna-Aceves - 1997
62 Multicast-Speci c Security Threats and Counter-measures - Ballardie, Crowcroft - 1995
60 SPX : Global authentication using public key certificates - J, ALAGAPPAN - 1991
58 How to broadcast a secret - BERKOVITS - 1991
52 Secure broadcasting using the secure lock - CHIOU, CHEN - 1989
47 Scalable Multicast Key Distribution,” RFC - Ballardie - 1949
45 On some methods for unconditionally secure key distribution and broadcast encryption. Des - Stinson - 1997
40 Enclaves: Enabling secure collaboration over the Internet - GONG - 1997
36 Designing a Distributed Authorization Service - Woo, Lam - 1998
33 Fiat and Moni Naor, “Broadcast encryption - Amos - 1994
29 CryptoLib: Cryptography in Software - Lacy, Mitchell, et al. - 1993
19 The KryptoKnight family of light-weight protocols for authentication and key distribution - Bird, Gopal, et al. - 1995
12 SNP: An interface for secure network programming - Woo, Bindignavle, et al. - 1994
2 and Chung Kei Wong. Keystone: A Group Key Management Service. Work in progress - Lam
The National Science Foundation
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