Woo–Lam

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In cryptography, Woo–Lam refers to various computer network authentication protocols designed by Simon S. Lam and Thomas Woo.[1][2] The protocols enable two communicating parties to authenticate each other's identity and to exchange session keys, and involve the use of a trusted key distribution center (KDC) to negotiate between the parties. Both symmetric-key and public-key variants have been described. However, the protocols suffer from various security flaws, and in part have been described as being inefficient compared to alternative authentication protocols.[3]

Public-key protocol

Notation

The following notation is used to describe the algorithm:

A,B - network nodes.
KUx - public key of node x.
KRx - private key of x.
Nx - nonce chosen by x.
IDx - unique identifier of x.
Ek - public-key encryption using key k.
Sk - digital signature using key k.
K - random session key chosen by the KDC.
|| - concatenation.

It is assumed that all parties know the KDC's public key.

Message exchange

1)AKDC:IDA||IDB
2)KDCA:SKRKDC[IDB||KUB]
3)AB:EKUB[NA||IDA]
4)BKDC:IDB||IDA||EKUKDC[NA]
5)KDCB:SKRKDC[IDA||KUA]||EKUB[SKRKDC[NA||K||IDB||IDA]]
6)BA:EKUA[SKRKDC[NA||K]||NB]
7)AB:EK[NB]

The original version of the protocol[4] had the identifier IDA omitted from lines 5 and 6, which did not account for the fact that NA is unique only among nonces generated by A and not by other parties. The protocol was revised after the authors themselves spotted a flaw in the algorithm.[1][3]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 T.Y.C. Woo; S.S. Lam (March 1992). "Authentication Revisited". Computer 25 (3): 10. doi:10.1109/2.121502. 
  2. Colin Boyd; Anish Mathuria (2003). Protocols for authentication and key establishment. Springer. p. 78 and 99. ISBN 978-3-540-43107-7. https://archive.org/details/protocolsforauth00boyd. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Stallings, William (2005). Cryptography and Network Security Principles and Practices, Fourth Edition. Prentice Hall. p. 387. ISBN 978-0-13-187316-2. 
  4. Thomas Y.C. Woo; Simon S. Lam (January 1992). "Authentication for Distributed Systems". Computer 25 (1): 39–52. doi:10.1109/2.108052.