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15th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Workshop (CSFW'02)
Cryptographic Types
Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada
June 24-June 26
ISBN: 0-7695-1689-0
Dominic Duggan, Stevens Institute of Technology
Cryptographic types are a way to express cryptographic guarantees (of secrecy and integrity) in a type system for a network programming language. This allows some of these guarantees to be checked statically, before a network program executes. Where dynamic checks are required, these are represented at the source language level as dynamic type-checking, and are translated by the compiler to lower level cryptographic operations. Static checking avoids the unnecessary overhead of run-time cryptographic operations where communication is through a trusted medium (e.g. the OS kernel, or a trusted subnet), and also provides static guarantees of the reliability of a network application. Cryptographic types can also be used to build application-specific security protocols, where type-checking in the lower layer of the protocol stack verifies security properties for upper layer. Cryptographic types are described formally using a process calculus, the ec-calculus. Correctness is verified for a scheme for compiling type operation to cryptographic operations.
Citation:
Dominic Duggan, "Cryptographic Types," csfw, pp.238, 15th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Workshop (CSFW'02), 2002
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