Universal Designated Verifier Signatures with Threshold-Signers (original) (raw)
2009, Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Universal designated verifier signatures (UDVS) were introduced in 2003 by Steinfeld et al. to allow signature holders to monitor the verification of a given signature in the sense that any plain signature can be publicly turned into a signature which is only verifiable by some specific designated verifier. Privacy issues, like non-dissemination of digital certificates, are the main motivations to study such primitives. In this paper, we propose two fairly efficient UDVS schemes which are secure (in terms of unforgeability and anonymity) in the standard model (i.e. without random oracles). Their security relies on algorithmic assumptions which are much more classical than assumptions involved in the two only known UDVS schemes in standard model to date. The latter schemes, put forth by , rely on the Strong Diffie-Hellman assumption and the strange-looking knowledge of exponent assumption (KEA). Our schemes are obtained from Waters's signature and they do not need the KEA assumption. They are also the first random oracle-free constructions with the anonymity property.
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