Title :
Building governments in e-government: settlement of trusted e-oligarchy
Author_Institution :
Technol. Policy & Manage., Delft Univ. of Technol., Netherlands
Abstract :
More and more governments tend also to offer their services for mobile users. For many of their e-transactions that involve one or more pervasive computing entities, the role of a central trusted authority (TA) for assuring the binding between the identities and the used asymmetric keys is crucial. Usually governments take care of such a trusted third party. However, when this TA becomes unreachable, governments cannot instantly set up another TA and recovering the original TA takes too much valuable time. The reliance on those TA´s without another alternative trust system can therefore jeopardize the transactions. In this paper a mechanism is proposed in which new TA´s can be (re)elected autonomously and securely by a group of computing entities from their midst when the original TA becomes unreachable. Those new TA´s rule then as an oligarchy over the other computing entities.
Keywords :
government data processing; public key cryptography; ubiquitous computing; asymmetric key; central trusted authority; e-government; e-transaction; pervasive computing; trusted e-oligarchy; trusted third party; Adaptive systems; Clocks; Communication system security; Electronic government; Identity-based encryption; Iron; Pervasive computing; Portable computers; Protocols; Technology management;
Conference_Titel :
Availability, Reliability and Security, 2006. ARES 2006. The First International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2567-9
DOI :
10.1109/ARES.2006.40