Quotable Signatures for Authenticating Shared Quotes
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.10963v4
- Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2023 09:26:21 GMT
- Title: Quotable Signatures for Authenticating Shared Quotes
- Authors: Joan Boyar, Simon Erfurth, Kim S. Larsen, Ruben Niederhagen
- Abstract summary: Quotable signature schemes are digital signature schemes with the additional property that from the signature for a message, any party can extract signatures for (allowable) quotes from the message.
We define a notion of security for quotable signature schemes and construct a concrete example of a quotable signature scheme.
We consider both how quotable signatures can be used, and why using them could help mitigate the effects of fake news.
- Score: 0.8875650122536799
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Quotable signature schemes are digital signature schemes with the additional
property that from the signature for a message, any party can extract
signatures for (allowable) quotes from the message, without knowing the secret
key or interacting with the signer of the original message. Crucially, the
extracted signatures are still signed with the original secret key. We define a
notion of security for quotable signature schemes and construct a concrete
example of a quotable signature scheme, using Merkle trees and classical
digital signature schemes. The scheme is shown to be secure, with respect to
the aforementioned notion of security. Additionally, we prove bounds on the
complexity of the constructed scheme and provide algorithms for signing,
quoting, and verifying. Finally, concrete use cases of quotable signatures are
considered, using them to combat misinformation by bolstering authentic content
on social media. We consider both how quotable signatures can be used, and why
using them could help mitigate the effects of fake news.
Related papers
- Quantum digital signature based on single-qubit without a trusted third-party [45.41082277680607]
We propose a brand new quantum digital signature protocol without a trusted third party only with qubit technology to further improve the security.
We prove that the protocol has information-theoretical unforgeability. Moreover, it satisfies other important secure properties, including asymmetry, undeniability, and expandability.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-10-17T09:49:29Z) - MS2SL: Multimodal Spoken Data-Driven Continuous Sign Language Production [93.32354378820648]
We propose a unified framework for continuous sign language production, easing communication between sign and non-sign language users.
A sequence diffusion model, utilizing embeddings extracted from text or speech, is crafted to generate sign predictions step by step.
Experiments on How2Sign and PHOENIX14T datasets demonstrate that our model achieves competitive performance in sign language production.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-07-04T13:53:50Z) - Investigating the Common Authorship of Signatures by Off-Line Automatic Signature Verification Without the Use of Reference Signatures [3.3498759480099856]
This paper addresses the problem of automatic signature verification when no reference signatures are available.
The scenario we explore consists of a set of signatures, which could be signed by the same author or by multiple signers.
We discuss three methods which estimate automatically the common authorship of a set of off-line signatures.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-05-23T10:30:48Z) - The Variant of Designated Verifier Signature Scheme with Message Recovery [0.40964539027092917]
We introduce a strong Designated Verifier Signature (DVS) scheme that incorporates a message recovery mechanism.
This work is inspired by the concept of the Universal Designated Verifier Signature (UDVS) scheme.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-03-12T17:02:10Z) - Revocable Quantum Digital Signatures [57.25067425963082]
We define and construct digital signatures with revocable signing keys from the LWE assumption.
In this primitive, the signing key is a quantum state which enables a user to sign many messages.
Once the key is successfully revoked, we require that the initial recipient of the key loses the ability to sign.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-12-21T04:10:07Z) - Redactable and Sanitizable Signature Schemes: Applications and
Limitations for use in Decentralized Digital Identity Systems [8.501327327617313]
Redactable signature schemes and sanitizable signature schemes are methods that permit modification of a given digital message and retain a valid signature.
We propose implementing these protocols on a digital credential and compare them against other privacy-enhancing techniques to assess their suitability.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-10-26T10:28:25Z) - Concept and Construction of Group Signature with self-proof capacity for confirming and denying [0.069060054915724]
Group signature is a cryptosystem with central role in cryptography.
New extension concept of group signature is presented, namely group signature with self-proof capacity.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-26T03:30:03Z) - FedSOV: Federated Model Secure Ownership Verification with Unforgeable
Signature [60.99054146321459]
Federated learning allows multiple parties to collaborate in learning a global model without revealing private data.
We propose a cryptographic signature-based federated learning model ownership verification scheme named FedSOV.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-10T12:10:02Z) - Secure access system using signature verification over tablet PC [62.21072852729544]
We describe a highly versatile and scalable prototype for Web-based secure access using signature verification.
The proposed architecture can be easily extended to work with different kinds of sensors and large-scale databases.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-11T11:05:47Z) - Automatic dense annotation of large-vocabulary sign language videos [85.61513254261523]
We propose a simple, scalable framework to vastly increase the density of automatic annotations.
We make these annotations publicly available to support the sign language research community.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-04T17:55:09Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.