Misplaced Pages

IEEE P1363

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

IEEE P1363 is an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standardization project for public-key cryptography . It includes specifications for:

#77922

4-577: The chair of the working group as of October 2008 is William Whyte of NTRU Cryptosystems, Inc., who has served since August 2001. Former chairs were Ari Singer , also of NTRU (1999–2001), and Burt Kaliski of RSA Security (1994–1999). The IEEE Standard Association withdrew all of the 1363 standards except 1363.3-2013 on 7 November 2019. This specification includes key agreement, signature, and encryption schemes using several mathematical approaches: integer factorization , discrete logarithm , and elliptic curve discrete logarithm . This document includes

8-407: A number of password-authenticated key agreement schemes, and a password-authenticated key retrieval scheme. This standard was published on 15 November 2013. It includes techniques for identity-based encryption, signatures, signcryption, key agreement, and proxy re-encryption, all based on bilinear pairings. Burt Kaliski Burton S. "Burt" Kaliski, Jr. is a cryptographer, who is currently

12-477: The chief technology officer (CTO) and senior vice president at Verisign . Before joining Verisign in 2011, he was the founding director of the EMC Innovation Network at EMC Corporation since its 2006 acquisition of RSA Security where he was Chief Scientist for RSA Laboratories. His notable work includes the development of such public key cryptography standards as PKCS and IEEE P1363 ,

16-486: The extension of linear cryptanalysis to use multiple approximations, and the design of the block cipher Crab . Kaliski received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from MIT , where his research was on cryptography. He was a visiting assistant professor of computer engineering at Rochester Institute of Technology before joining RSA Security. He was also a guest professor and member of

#77922