Cryptography Reference
In-Depth Information
44. Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir, and Yael Tauman, “How to Leak a Secret,” in
Advances
in Cryptology—ASIACRYPT 2001
, ed. Colin Boyd (Berlin: Springer, 2001), 552-565.
45. Chaum, “Blind Signatures for Untraceable Payments.”
46. Markus Stadler, Jean-Marc Piveteau, and Jan Camenisch, “Fair Blind Signatures,”
in
EUROCRYPT '95—Proceedings of the 14Th Annual International Conference on Theory
and Application of Cryptographic Techniques
, ed. Louis C. Guillou and Jean-Jacques
Quisquater (Berlin: Springer, 1995), 209-219.
47. Mihir Bellare and Sara Miner, “A Forward-Secure Digital Signature Scheme,” in
Advances in Cryptology—CRYPTO '99
, ed. Michael Weiner (Berlin: Springer, 1999),
431-448.
48. David Chaum and Hans van Antwerpen, “Undeniable Signatures,” in
Advances
in Cryptology—CRYPTO '89 Proceedings
, ed. G. Brassard (Berlin: Springer-Verlag,
1990), 212-217.
49. Joan Boyar, David Chaum, Ivan Damgård, and Torben Pedersen, “Convertible
Undeniable Signatures,”
Advances in Cryptology—CRYPT0 '90
, ed. Alfred J. Menezes
and Scott A. Vanstone (Berlin: Springer, 1991), 189-205; David Chaum, “Designated
Confirmer Signatures,” in
Advances in Cryptology—EUROCRYPT '94
, ed. Alfredo De
Santis (Berlin: Springer, 1995), 86-91.
50. Markus Jakobsson and Moti Yung, “Revokable and Versatile Electronic Money,”
in
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security
(CCS '96)
(New York: ACM Press, 1996), 76-87.
51. Birgit Pfitzmann, “Fail-Stop Signatures: Principles and Applications.” In
Proceed-
ings of Compsec '91, Eighth World Conference on Computer Security, Audit, and Control
(New York: Elsevier Science Publishers, 1991), 125-134.
52. Menezes, van Oorschot, and Vanstone,
Handbook of Applied Cryptography
, 488.
53. Pfitzmann, “Fail-Stop Signatures; Principles and Applications,” 127-128.
54. Rivest, Shamir, and Tauman, “How to Leak a Secret,” 554-555.
55. Andrey Nikolayevich Tikhonov, “Mathematical Models,” in
Encyclopedia of
Mathematics
, ed. Michiel Hazewinkel (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 2002).
56. Morgan and Morrison,
Models as Mediators
, 12.
57. Ibid., 36.
58. Roman Frigg and Stephen Hartmann, “Models in Science,”
Stanford Encyclopedia
of Philosophy
(Summer 2009 ed.), ed. Edward N. Zalta, available at http://plato.stan-
ford.edu/archives/sum2009/entries/models-science/ (accessed October 10, 2011).
59. Ian Hacking,
Representing and Intervening: Introductory Topics in the Philosophy of
Natural Science
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 216; Mary S. Morgan,