Zero-knowledge proofs of identity
Last updated
Last updated
Let us introduce two new protagonists:
Peggy wishes to prove to Victor that she knows a secret.
Victor wishes to verify that Peggy knows the secret.
The proof will be based on challenge-response pairs and it will be probabilistic.
The probability that an impersonator is accepted (false proof) decreases as more challenge-response pairs are used.
One of the first published ways to do it uses (again) the hardness of factoring large integers.
Again, the underlying problem is computing square roots modulo .