Title :
Notice of Violation of IEEE Publication Principles
Network Protocols Analyzing by an Environmental Bisimulation Method
Author :
Gan, Min ; Yue, Guoying ; Wang, Hongfa
Author_Institution :
Zhejiang Water Conservancy & Hydropower Coll., Hangzhou
fDate :
July 30 2007-Aug. 1 2007
Abstract :
Notice of Violation of IEEE Publication Principles
"Network Protocols Analyzing by an Environmental Bisimulation Method"
by Min Gan, Guoying Yue, Hongfa Wang
in the Eighth ACIS International Conference on Software Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Networking, and Parallel/Distributed Computing, July 2007, pp 363-367
After careful and considered review of the content and authorship of this paper by a duly constituted expert committee, this paper has been found to be in violation of IEEE\´s Publication Principles.
This paper contains significant portions of original text from the paper cited below. The original text was copied without attribution (including appropriate references to the original author(s) and/or paper title) and without permission.
Due to the nature of this violation, reasonable effort should be made to remove all past references to this paper, and future references should be made to the following article:
"Analyzing Security Protocols by a Bisimulation Method Based on Environmental Knowledge"
by Y.H. Lu, Y.G. Gu, X.R. Chen and Y. Fu
in the Proceeding of 2005 International Conference on Communications, Circuits and Systems, May 2005, pp. 79-83
Environmental bisimulation method is an important relation in the Spi calculus, which is usually used to reason about interactive systems. In this paper we adopted it in analyzing network protocols and intended to try it on checking the soundness of the Kerberos protocol. Rigorous proofs on its two security properties reveal that the authenticity property holds while its secrecy property is threatened by a possible attack.
Keywords :
bisimulation equivalence; formal verification; process algebra; protocols; security of data; Kerberos protocol; Spi calculus; environmental bisimulation method; interactive systems; network protocols; security properties; Artificial intelligence; Calculus; Computer networks; Cryptography; Data security; Distributed computing; Gallium nitride; Information analysis; Protocols; Software engineering;
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Networking, and Parallel/Distributed Computing, 2007. SNPD 2007. Eighth ACIS International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Qingdao
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-2909-7
DOI :
10.1109/SNPD.2007.213