Thomas M. Cover
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
SSL is the de facto standard today for securing end-to-end transport on the Internet. While the protocol itself seems rather secure, there are a number of risks that lurk in its use, for example, in web banking. However, the adoption of password-based key-exchange protocols can overcome some of these problems. We propose the integration of such a protocol (DH-EKE) in the TLS protocol, the standardization of SSL by IETF. The resulting protocol provides secure mutual authentication and key establishment over an insecure channel. It does not have to resort to a PKI or keys and certificates stored on the users computer. Additionally, its integration in TLS is as minimal and non-intrusive as possible. © 2001, ACM. All rights reserved.
Thomas M. Cover
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
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Communications of the ACM
Robert C. Durbeck
IEEE TACON
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DAC 1976