On Mon, 5 May 2008, Ariel Waissbein wrote:
[Moderator's note: Again, top posting is discouraged, and not editing
quoted material is also discouraged. --Perry]
Hi list,
Interesting. Great work! I had been looking *generic* predicate
encryption for some time. Encryption over specific predicates
Jonathan Katz wrote:
On Mon, 5 May 2008, Ariel Waissbein wrote:
[Moderator's note: Again, top posting is discouraged, and not editing
quoted material is also discouraged. --Perry]
Hi list,
Interesting. Great work! I had been looking *generic* predicate
encryption for some time.
. Padding with 0's doesn't help.
Cheers, Scott
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jonathan Katz
Sent: Sunday, May 04, 2008 1:20 PM
To: cryptography@metzdowd.com
Subject: RE: New result in predicate encryption: disjunction support
On Sun, 4 May
[Moderator's note: Again, top posting is discouraged, and not editing
quoted material is also discouraged. --Perry]
Hi list,
Interesting. Great work! I had been looking *generic* predicate
encryption for some time. Encryption over specific predicates is much
older. Malware (e.g., virus) and
A group member asked me to elaborate on:
- No knowledge of which groups can be successfully authenticated is
known to the verifier
What this tries to say is that the verifier doesn't need to have a list of
all authenticable groups nor can the verifier draw any conclusions about
other
On Sun, 4 May 2008, Scott Guthery wrote:
One useful application of the Katz/Sahai/Waters work is a counter to traffic
analysis. One can send the same message to everyone but ensure that only a
defined subset can read the message by proper key management. What is less
clear is how to ensure