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  1. Proceedings of the 4th symposium on Usable privacy and security (SOUPS '08)
  2. Universal device pairing using an auxiliary device
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Improving text passwords through persuasion
Use Your Illusion: secure authentication usable anywhere
Evaluating assistance of natural language policy authoring
A user study of off-the-record messaging
Personal knowledge questions for fallback authentication: security questions in the era of Facebook
Usability of CAPTCHAs or usability issues in CAPTCHA design
Expressions of expertness: the virtuous circle of natural language for access control policy specification
The challenges of using an intrusion detection system: is it worth the effort?
Securing passfaces for description
Universal device pairing using an auxiliary device
Evaluating the usability of usage controls in electronic collaboration
Analyzing websites for user-visible security design flaws

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Universal device pairing using an auxiliary device

Content Provider ACM Digital Library
Author Uddin, Md. Borhan Saxena, Nitesh Voris, Jonathan
Abstract The operation of achieving authenticated key agreement between two human-operated devices over a short-range wireless communication channel (such as Bluetooth or WiFi) is referred to as "Pairing". The devices in such a scenario are ad hoc in nature, i.e., they can neither be assumed to have a prior context (such as pre-shared secrets) with each other nor do they share a common trusted on- or off-line authority. However, the devices can generally be connected using auxiliary physical channel(s) (such as audio, visual, etc.) that can be authenticated by the device user(s) and thus form a basis for pairing. One of the main challenges of secure device pairing is the lack of good quality output interfaces as well as corresponding receivers on devices. In [13], we presented a pairing scheme which is universally applicable to any pair of devices (such as a WiFi AP and a laptop, a Bluetooth keyboard and a desktop, etc.). The scheme is based upon the device user(s) comparing short and simple synchronized audiovisual patterns, such as "beeping" and "blinking". In this paper, we automate the (manual) scheme of [13] by making use of an auxiliary, commonly available device such as a personal camera phone. Based on a preliminary user study we conducted, we show that the automated scheme is generally faster and more user-friendly relative to the manual scheme. More importantly, the proposed scheme turns out to be quite accurate in the detection of any possible attacks.
Starting Page 56
Ending Page 67
Page Count 12
File Format PDF
ISBN 9781605582764
DOI 10.1145/1408664.1408672
Language English
Publisher Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publisher Date 2008-07-23
Publisher Place New York
Access Restriction Subscribed
Subject Keyword Distributed protocols Authentication Security Mobile/ad-hoc systems
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
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