6 - Digital Signatures and Message Authentication
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2010
Summary
Message authentication and (digital) signatures were the first tasks that joined encryption to form modern cryptography. Both message authentication and digital signatures are concerned with the “authenticity” of data, and the difference between them is analogous to the difference between private–key and public–key encryption schemes.
In this chapter, we define message authentication and digital signatures, and the security notions associated with them. We show how to construct message–authentication schemes using pseudorandom functions, and how to construct signature schemes using one–way permutations. We stress that the latter construction employs arbitrary one–way permutations, which do not necessarily have a trapdoor.
Organization. The basic definitions are presented in Section 6.1. Constructions of message–authentication schemes and signature schemes are presented in Sections 6.3 and 6.4, respectively. Toward presenting these constructions, we discuss restricted types of message authentication and signature schemes, which are of independent interest, such as length–restricted schemes (see Section 6.2) and one–time signature schemes (see Section 6.4.1). Additional issues are discussed in Sections 6.5 and 6.6.
Teaching Tip. In contrast to the case of encryption schemes (cf. Chapter 5), the definitional treatment of signatures (and message authentication) is quite simple. The treatment of length–restricted schemes (see Section 6.2) plays an important role in the construction of standard schemes, and thus we strongly recommend highlighting this treatment. We suggest focusing on the presentation of the simplest construction of message–authentication schemes (provided in Section 6.3.1) and on the (not–so–simple) construction of signature schemes that is provided in Sections 6.4.1 and 6.4.2.
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- Information
- Foundations of Cryptography , pp. 497 - 598Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004