• DocumentCode
    154029
  • Title

    Decidability for Lightweight Diffie-Hellman Protocols

  • Author

    Dougherty, Daniel J. ; Guttman, Joshua D.

  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    19-22 July 2014
  • Firstpage
    217
  • Lastpage
    231
  • Abstract
    Many protocols use Diffie-Hellman key agreement, combined with certified long-term values or digital signatures for authentication. These protocols aim at security goals such as key secrecy, forward secrecy, resistance to key compromise attacks, and various flavors of authentication. However, these protocols are challenging to analyze, both in computational and symbolic models. An obstacle in the symbolic model is the undecidability of unification in many theories in the signature of rings. In this paper, we develop an algebraic version of the symbolic approach, working directly within finite fields, the natural structures for the protocols. The adversary, in giving an attack on a protocol goal in a finite field, may rely on any identity in that field. He defeats the protocol if there are attacks in infinitely many finite fields. We prove that, even for this strong adversary, security goals for a wide class of protocols are decidable.
  • Keywords
    algebra; cryptographic protocols; decidability; Diffie-Hellman key agreement; algebraic version; authentication; certified long-term values; computational models; decidability; digital signatures; finite fields; forward secrecy; key compromise attacks resistance; key secrecy; lightweight Diffie-Hellman protocols; protocol goal; security goals; symbolic approach; symbolic models; Algebra; Computational modeling; DH-HEMTs; Digital signatures; Equations; Protocols; Diffie-Hellman; Security protocols; decidability; strand spaces;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computer Security Foundations Symposium (CSF), 2014 IEEE 27th
  • Conference_Location
    Vienna
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/CSF.2014.23
  • Filename
    6957113