Abstract
The theme of this year’s workshop emphasises the widespread use of security protocols in the current epoch. The Web 2.0 for example demands secure transactions for “brief encounters”, that is between principals that share a shortlived goal such as an e-bay purchase.
In this setting, the untouchable Dolev-Yao threat model is inappropriate. It seems more suitable to assume that principals do not share private knowledge and that each of them pursue personal interests without colluding with anyone else. They may attack each other.
This position paper attempts at exceeding Dolev-Yao. It analyses the best-known protocol scenario (which pertains to the Needham-Schroeder-Lowe protocol) under the new threat model, and discusses some novel findings. It shows that current validation methods based on machine-assisted finite-state enumeration scale up to our extended analysis.
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Arsac, W., Bella, G., Chantry, X., Compagna, L. (2013). Attacking Each Other. In: Christianson, B., Malcolm, J.A., Matyáš, V., Roe, M. (eds) Security Protocols XVII. Security Protocols 2009. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 7028. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-36213-2_7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-36213-2_7
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