Abstract:
An authentication protocol using a Hardware-Embedded Delay PUF ("HELP"), which derives randomness from within-die path delay variations that occur along the paths within a hardware implementation of a cryptographic primitive, for example, the Advanced Encryption Standard ("AES") algorithm or Secure Hash Algorithm 3 ("SHA-3"). The digitized timing values which represent the path delays are stored in a database on a secure server (verifier) as an alternative to storing PUF response bitstrings thereby enabling the development of an efficient authentication protocol that provides both privacy and mutual authentication.
Abstract:
An authentication protocol using a Hardware-Embedded Delay PUF ("HELP"), which derives randomness from within-die path delay variations that occur along the paths within a hardware implementation of a cryptographic primitive, for example, the Advanced Encryption Standard ("AES") algorithm or Secure Hash Algorithm 3 ("SHA-3"). The digitized timing values which represent the path delays are stored in a database on a secure server (verifier) as an alternative to storing PUF response bitstrings thereby enabling the development of an efficient authentication protocol that provides both privacy and mutual authentication.