IBM has an anonymous credential technology, written Java, available here. http://www.zurich.ibm.com/idemix/details.html
I personally would love to have IBM’s idemix available on .NET, mainly so I can compare and contrast implementations. For those who aren’t following UProve and Idemix, ABC4Trust is creating a Java-based interoperability profile between the two technologies, akin to selecting DSA and RSA for a higher level protocol. https://abc4trust.eu On 11/18/14, 8:37 AM, "Edward Ned Harvey (bouncycastle)" <bouncycas...@nedharvey.com> wrote: >> From: Mankowski, Chris [mailto:cmankow...@nfp.com] >> >> The Cryptographic purpose I*m using BC.BigInt is with MSFT UProve. That >> SDK modifies the Bouncy Castle source and includes the implicit >>operators >> I included. > >In other words, the implementation is already done, right? It's the code >you pasted... But I noticed BC is MIT licensed, and UProvecsharp is >Apache 2.0 licensed. Is the code you pasted actually fair game to >incorporate into BC? > >But this raises a question, I think, for Peter: > >What exactly is the relationship between bc-csharp, and bc-java? If >something like this gets incorporated into bc-csharp, does that >necessarily imply it needs to be done also for bc-java? ********************************************************************** This e-mail may contain information that is privileged, confidential or protected under state or federal law. If you are not an intended recipient of this email, please delete it, notify the sender immediately, and do not copy, use or disseminate any information in the e-mail. Pursuant to IRS Circular 230, any tax advice in this email may not be used to avoid any penalties imposed under U.S. tax laws. E-mail sent to or from this e-mail address may be monitored, reviewed and archived.