In
cryptography
Cryptography, or cryptology (from "hidden, secret"; and ''graphein'', "to write", or ''-logy, -logia'', "study", respectively), is the practice and study of techniques for secure communication in the presence of Adversary (cryptography), ...
, server-based signatures are
digital signatures in which a publicly available server participates in the signature creation process. This is in contrast to conventional digital signatures that are based on
public-key cryptography
Public-key cryptography, or asymmetric cryptography, is the field of cryptographic systems that use pairs of related keys. Each key pair consists of a public key and a corresponding private key. Key pairs are generated with cryptographic alg ...
and
public-key infrastructure
A public key infrastructure (PKI) is a set of roles, policies, hardware, software and procedures needed to create, manage, distribute, use, store and revoke digital certificates and manage public-key encryption.
The purpose of a PKI is to fac ...
. With that, they assume that signers use their personal
trusted computing base
The trusted computing base (TCB) of a computer system is the set of all hardware, firmware, and/or software components that are critical to its security, in the sense that bugs or vulnerabilities occurring inside the TCB might jeopardize the ...
s for generating signatures without any communication with servers.
Four different classes of server based signatures have been proposed:
1. Lamport One-Time Signatures. Proposed in 1979 by
Leslie Lamport.
Lamport one-time signatures are based on
cryptographic hash functions. For signing a message, the signer just sends a list of hash values (outputs of a hash function) to a publishing server and therefore the signature process is very fast, though the size of the signature is many times larger, compared to ordinary public-key signature schemes.
2. On-line/off-line Digital Signatures. First proposed in 1989 by
Even,
Goldreich and
Micali in order to speed up the signature creation procedure, which is usually much more time-consuming than verification. In case of
RSA, it may be one thousand times slower than verification. On-line/off-line digital signatures are created in two phases. The first phase is performed
off-line, possibly even before the message to be signed is known. The second (message-dependent) phase is performed on-line and involves communication with a server. In the first (off-line) phase, the signer uses a conventional public-key digital signature scheme to sign a public key of the Lamport one-time signature scheme. In the second phase, a message is signed by using the Lamport signature scheme. Some later works
have improved the efficiency of the original solution by Even et al.
3. Server-Supported Signatures (SSS). Proposed in 1996 by
Asokan,
Tsudik and
Waidner in order to delegate the use of time-consuming operations of
asymmetric cryptography
Public-key cryptography, or asymmetric cryptography, is the field of cryptographic systems that use pairs of related keys. Each key pair consists of a public key and a corresponding private key. Key pairs are generated with cryptographic alg ...
from clients (ordinary users) to a server. For ordinary users, the use of asymmetric cryptography is limited to signature verification, i.e. there is no pre-computation phase like in the case of on-line/off-line signatures. The main motivation was the use of low-performance mobile devices for creating digital signatures, considering that such devices could be too slow for creating ordinary public-key digital signatures, such as
RSA. Clients use
hash chain
A hash chain is the successive application of a cryptographic hash function to a piece of data. In computer security, a hash chain is a method used to produce many one-time keys from a single key or password. For non-repudiation, a hash functi ...
based
authentication
Authentication (from ''authentikos'', "real, genuine", from αὐθέντης ''authentes'', "author") is the act of proving an Logical assertion, assertion, such as the Digital identity, identity of a computer system user. In contrast with iden ...
to send their messages to a signature server in an
authenticated
Authentication (from ''authentikos'', "real, genuine", from αὐθέντης ''authentes'', "author") is the act of proving an assertion, such as the identity of a computer system user. In contrast with identification, the act of indicating a ...
way and the server then creates a digital signature by using an ordinary public-key
digital signature scheme. In SSS, signature servers are not assumed to be
Trusted Third Parties (TTPs) because the transcript of the hash chain authentication phase can be used for
non repudiation purposes. In SSS, servers cannot create signatures in the name of their clients.
4. Delegate Servers (DS). Proposed in 2002 by Perrin, Bruns, Moreh and Olkin in order to reduce the problems and costs related to individual
private key
Public-key cryptography, or asymmetric cryptography, is the field of cryptographic systems that use pairs of related keys. Each key pair consists of a public key and a corresponding private key. Key pairs are generated with cryptographic alg ...
s. In their solution, clients (ordinary users) delegate their private cryptographic operations to a Delegation Server (DS). Users authenticate to DS and request to sign messages on their behalf by using the server's own private key. The main motivation behind DS was that private keys are difficult for ordinary users to use and easy for attackers to abuse. Private keys are not memorable like
password
A password, sometimes called a passcode, is secret data, typically a string of characters, usually used to confirm a user's identity. Traditionally, passwords were expected to be memorized, but the large number of password-protected services t ...
s or derivable from persons like
biometrics
Biometrics are body measurements and calculations related to human characteristics and features. Biometric authentication (or realistic authentication) is used in computer science as a form of identification and access control. It is also used t ...
, and cannot be entered from
keyboards like passwords. Private keys are mostly stored as
files in
computer
A computer is a machine that can be Computer programming, programmed to automatically Execution (computing), carry out sequences of arithmetic or logical operations (''computation''). Modern digital electronic computers can perform generic set ...
s or on
smart-cards, that may be stolen by attackers and abuse off-line. In 2003, Buldas and Saarepera
[Buldas, A., Saarepera, M.: Electronic signature system with small number of private keys. In 2nd Annual PKI Research Workshop---Proceedings, pp. 96--108 (2003) ] proposed a two-level architecture of delegation servers that addresses the trust issue by replacing trust with threshold trust via the use of
threshold cryptosystem A threshold cryptosystem, the basis for the field of threshold cryptography, is a cryptosystem that protects information by encrypting it and distributing it among a cluster of fault-tolerant computers. The message is encrypted using a public key, ...
s.
References
{{Reflist
Cryptography