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Perera, M. N. S., Nakamura, T., Hashimoto, M., Yokoyama, H., Cheng, C.-M., & Sakurai, K. (2022). A survey on group signatures and ring signatures: Traceability vs. anonymity. Cryptography, 6(1). 
Added by: Rucknium (2022-02-26 22:36)   
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.3390/cryptography6010003
ID no. (ISBN etc.): 2410-387X
BibTeX citation key: Perera2022
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Categories: Monero-focused
Creators: Cheng, Hashimoto, Nakamura, Perera, Sakurai, Yokoyama
Collection: Cryptography
Views: 41/1725
Attachments   cryptography-06-00003.pdf [17/912] URLs   https://www.mdpi.com/2410-387X/6/1/3
Abstract
This survey reviews the two most prominent group-oriented anonymous signature schemes and analyzes the existing approaches for their problem: balancing anonymity against traceability. Group signatures and ring signatures are the two leading competitive signature schemes with a rich body of research. Both group and ring signatures enable user anonymity with group settings. Any group user can produce a signature while hiding his identity in a group. Although group signatures have predefined group settings, ring signatures allow users to form ad-hoc groups. Preserving user identities provided an advantage for group and ring signatures. Thus, presently many applications utilize them. However, standard group signatures enable an authority to freely revoke signers’ anonymity. Thus, the authority might weaken the anonymity of innocent users. On the other hand, traditional ring signatures maintain permanent user anonymity, allowing space for malicious user activities; thus achieving the requirements of privacy-preserved traceability in group signatures and controlled anonymity in ring signatures has become desirable. This paper reviews group and ring signatures and explores the existing approaches that address the identification of malicious user activities. We selected many papers that discuss balancing user tracing and anonymity in group and ring signatures. Since this paper scrutinizes both signatures from their basic idea to obstacles including tracing users, it provides readers a broad synthesis of information about two signature schemes with the knowledge of current approaches to balance excessive traceability in group signatures and extreme anonymity in ring signatures. This paper will also shape the future research directions of two critical signature schemes that require more awareness.
Added by: Rucknium  
WIKINDX 6.5.0 | Total resources: 210 | Username: -- | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography | Style: American Psychological Association (APA)