Trustworthy Global Computing ; International Symposium, TGC 2005, Edinburgh, UK, April 7-9, 2005. Revised Selected Papers
Constitutes the post-proceedings of the International Symposium on Trustworthy Global Computing. This book covers issues, such as resource usage, language-based security, theories of trust and authentication, privacy, reliability and business integrity access control and mechanisms for enforcing them, and more.
Topics in cryptology - CT-RSA 2008 ; The cryptographers’ track at the RSA Conference 2008, San Francisco, CA, USA, April 8-11, 2008. Proceedings
This book includes : hash function cryptanalysis, cryptographic building blocks, fairness in secure computation, message authentication codes, improved aes implementations, public key encryption with special properties, side channel cryptanalysis, cryptography for limited devices, invited talk, key exchange, cryptanalysis, and cryptographic protocols.
Topics in cryptology -- CT-RSA 2006 ; The cryptographers' track at the RSA Conference 2006, San Jose, CA, USA, February 13-17, 2005, Proceedings
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Cryptographers’ Track at the RSA Conference 2006,held in San Jose, CA, USA, February 13-17, 2005. The RSA R Conference, with over 15,000attendees, as well as over 225 sponsors and exhibitors, is the largest computer security event of the year. The Cr- tographers’ Track is one of the many parallel tracks. These proceedings contain the papers presented during the sixth edition. The tradition indeed started in 2001, and is by now well established: the Cryptographers’ Track at the RSA Conference is among the major events in cryptography. There were 72 submitted contributions, of which 22 were selected for p- sentation. They cover all aspects of cryptography (symmetric and asymmetric cryptography, constructions and attacks, new trends).
Theory of Cryptography ; Vol. 3876 ; 3rd Theory of Cryptography Conference, TCC 2006, New York, NY, USA, March 4-7, 2006, Proceedings
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the PrefaceTCC 2006 was the third Theory of Cryptography Conference, which washeld at Columbia University in Manhattan, New York, March 4-7, 2006. TCC2006 was sponsored by the International Association for Cryptologic Research(IACR) and organized in cooperation with the Computer Science Departmentof Columbia University. Theproceedings consist of the revised versions of 31 papers. The papers are organized in topical sections on zero-knowledge, primitives, assumptions and models, the bounded-retrieval model, privacy, secret sharing and multi-party computation, universally-composible security, one-way functions and friends, and pseudo-random functions and encryption.
Theory of Cryptography ; Vol. 3378 ; 2nd Theory of Cryptography Conference, TCC 2005, Cambridge, MA, USA, February 10-12. 2005, Proceedings
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed proceedings of the 10th Theory of Cryptography Conference, TCC 2013, held in Tokyo, Japan, in March 2013. The papers cover topics such as study of known paradigms, approaches, and techniques, directed towards their better understanding and utilization
Theory of Cryptography ; 5th Theory of Cryptography Conference, TCC 2008, New York, USA, March 19-21, 2008. Proceedings
The papers are organized in 16 sessions dealing with the paradigms, approaches and techniques used to conceptualize, define and provide solutions to natural cryptographic problems.
Smart Card Research and Advanced Applications ; 8th IFIP WG 8.8/11.2 International Conference, CARDIS 2008, London, UK, September 8-11, 2008. Proceedings
This book deals with the various issues related to the use of small electronic tokens in the process of human-machine interactions. The conference scopes include numerous subfields such as networking, efficient implementations, physical security, biometrics, etc.
Selected Areas in Cryptography ; Vol. 3897 ; 12th International Workshop, SAC 2005, Kingston, ON, Canada, August 11-12, 2005, Revised Selected Papers
This volume contains the papers presented at the SAC 2005, was the 12th in a series of annual workshops on Selected Areas in Cryptography. The themes for SAC 2005 were: – design and analysis of symmetric key cryptosystems; – primitives for symmetric key cryptography, including block and stream - phers, hash functions, and MAC algorithms; – e?cient implementations of symmetric and public key algorithms; – cryptographic algorithms and protocols for ubiquitous computing (sensor networks, RFID).
Selected Areas in Cryptography ; 14th International Workshop, SAC 2007, Ottawa, Canada, August 16-17, 2007, Revised Selected Papers
SAC 2007 was the 14th in a series of annual workshops on Selected Areas in Cryptography. This is the ?rst time this workshop was held at the University of Ottawa. Previous workshops were held at Queen’s University in Kingston (1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, and 2005), Carleton University in Ottawa (1995, 1997, and 2003), University of Waterloo (2000 and 2004), Fields Institute in Toronto (2001), Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. Johns (2002), and Conc- dia University in Montreal (2006). The intent of the workshop is to provide a stimulating atmosphere where researchersin cryptology can present and discuss new work on selected areas of current interest.
Selected areas in cryptography ; 11th International Workshop, SAC 2004, Waterloo, Canada, August 9-10, 2004, Revised Selected Papers
Design and analysis of symmetric key cryptosystems. – Primitives for symmetric key cryptography, including block and stream - phers, hash functions, and MAC algorithms. – Encient implementation of cryptographic systems in public and symmetric key cryptography. – Cryptographic solutions for mobile (web) services. A record of 117 papers were submitted for consideration by the program committee. After an extensive review process, 25 papers were accepted for p- sentation at the workshop (two of these papers were merged).
Security Protocols ; Vol. 3957 ; 12th International Workshop, Cambridge, UK, April 26-28, 2004. Revised Selected Papers
" This volume contains the papers presented at the12th International Workshop, Cambridge, UK, April 26-28, 2004. Our theme this workshop was “Authentic Privacy.” Traditionally we have based authentication upon a rather strong notion of identity, and have then built other security services on top of authentication. Perhaps if we want a more nuanced notion of privacy, then we need to re-examine some of our assu- tions, particularly when attackers and defenders share the same resources and infrastructure.
Security protocols ; Vol. 3364 ; 11th International Workshop, Cambridge, UK, April 2-4, 2003, Revised Selected Papers
Theme this time was “Where have all the Protocols gone?” Once upon a time security protocols lived mainly in the network and transport layers. Now they increasingly hide in applications, or in specialised hardware. Does this trend lead to better security architectures, or is it an indication that we are addressing the wrong problems? The intention of the workshops is to provide a forum where incompletely worked out ideas can stimulate discussion, open up new lines of investigation, and suggest more problems.
Security Protocols ; 13th International Workshop, Cambridge, UK, April 20-22, 2005, Revised Selected Papers
Welcome to the Proceedings of the 13th International Security Protocols Wo- shop. As usual, our meeting in Cambridge was just the beginning. After that, position papers were revised (often more than once) and transcripts were c- culated, discussed, and edited several times: our intention was not to produce a sterile record of who said what, but to share some promising lines of enquiry into interesting problems. Now we bring these proceedings to a wider audience so that you can join in. Our theme this time was “The systemlikes youandwants to be yourfriend.” Security is usually seen as making systems more di?cult for humans to use.
Security in Pervasive Computing ; Vol. 3934 ; Third International Conference, SPC 2006, York, UK, April 18-21, 2006, Proceedings
This volume contains the papers presented at the Third International Conference on Security in Pervasive Computing (SPC 2006), held , 2006 in York, UK. The conference focused on methods, tools, principles, and practices for assessing and achieving security in a pervasive environment. New security concepts were discussed, in domains and applications such as handheld devices, mobile phones, smartcards, RFID chips, and smart labels, as well as new, emerging technological spaces
Security in pervasive computing ; Vol. 3450 ; 2nd International Conference, SPC 2005, Boppard, Germany, April 6-8, 2005, Proceedings
The objective of this second conference was to develop new security concepts for complex application scenarios based on systems like handhelds, phones, smartcards, RFID-chips and smart labels hand in hand with the emerging technology of ubiquitous and pervasive computing. In particular the conference focused on methods and technologies concerning the identification of risks, the definition of security policies, and the development of security and privacy measures, especially cryptographic protocols that are related to specific aspects of ubiquitous and pervasive computing like mobility, location-based services, adhoc networking, resource allocation / restriction, invisibility, and secure hardware / software platforms.
Security in communication networks ; 4th International Conference, SCN 2004, Amalfi, Italy, September 8-10, 2004, Revised Selected Papers
The main topics included all technical aspects of data security, including : anonymity, authentication, block ciphers, complexity-based cryptography, cryptanalysis, digital signatures, distributed cryptography, hash functions, identifition, implementations, key distribution, privacy, public key encryption, threshold cryptography, and zero knowledge. The Program Committee, consisting of 21 members, considered 79 papers and selected 26 for presentation; one of them was withdrawn by the authors. These papers were selected on the basis of originality, quality and relevance to cryptography and security in communication networks. Due to the high number of submissions, paper selection was a di?cult and challenging task, and many good submissions had to be rejected. Each subm- sion was refereed by at least three reviewers and some had four reports or more.
Security in ad-hoc and sensor networks ; 1st European Workshop, ESAS 2004, Heidelberg, Germany, August 6, 2004, Revised Selected Papers
Ad hoc and sensor networks are making their way from research to real-world deployments. Body and personal-area networks, intelligent homes, environmental monitoring or inter-vehicle communications: there is almost nothing left that is not going to be smart and networked. While a great amount of research has been devoted to the pure networking aspects, ad hoc and sensor networks will not be successfully deployed if security, dependability, and privacy issues are not addressed adequately.
Security and Privacy in Ad-hoc and Sensor Networks ; Vol. 4357 ; Third European Workshop, ESAS 2006, Hamburg, Germany, September 20-21, 2006, Revised Selected Papers
"These procee dingscontain the papers of the 3rd European Workshopon Security and Privacy in Ad Hoc and Sensor Networks (ESAS 2006),which was held in Hamburg, Germany, September 20–21, 2006,This year, a total of 44 full papers were submitted to ESAS. the Program Committee selected 14 papers for presentation and subsequent publication in the workshop proceedings.
Security and Privacy in Ad-hoc and Sensor Networks ; Vol. 3813 ; Second European Workshop, ESAS 2005, Visegrad, Hungary, July 13-14, 2005. Revised Selected Papers
It clearly demonstrates the continued importance, popularity and timeliness of the workshop’s topic : security and privacy in adhoc and sensor networks. A total of 51 full papers were submitted. Each submission was reviewed by at least three expert referees. After a short period of intense discussions and deliberations, the Program Committee selected 17 papers for presentation and subsequent publication in the workshop proceedings. This corresponds to an acceptance rate of 33% — a respectable rate by any measure.
Security and Privacy in Ad-hoc and Sensor Networks ; 4th European Workshop, ESAS 2007, Cambridge, UK, July 2-3, 2007, Proceedings
You hold in your hands the proceedings of ESAS 2007, the Fourth European Workshop on Security and Privacy in Ad hoc and Sensor Networks. The wo- nd rd shop took place in Cambridge, UK, on the 2 and 3 of July 2007. The workshop was European in name and location but it was de?nitely transatlantic in scope. We had a program chair from Europe and one from the USA, and membership of our program committee was almost evenly split - tween those two regions. When looking at participation, the workshop was even more global than that: the submitted papers came from 25 countries in 6 con- nents. We received 87 submissions.



















