On 18/04/15 17:19, Berkant Ustaoglu wrote: > > Quoting Michael Rogers <[email protected]>: > >> On 17/04/15 20:08, Trevor Perrin wrote: > >>> IMO there's a useful notion something like "don't leave signed >>> messages around by default" and then stronger academic notions around >>> the idea of "interacting with Alice doesn't give Bob anything he >>> couldn't simulate", which are somewhat dubious (again, IMO) since once >>> you start considering that Bob is actively trying to defeat Alice's >>> deniability he could simply share his private key with the 3rd-party >>> judge and have the judge execute the protocol as him. >> >> "Don't leave signed messages around" is fine for now. >> > > What is your opinion if I there are signed messages around but also the > private key with which the message was singed? Would that meet your notion > of deniability? >
If something is forgeable, then it is deniable. However, as the prover, it is only safe (for authentication purposes) to reveal the private key, after one is sure that other people (the verifiers) have acknowledged / promised that they - have verified your signature, and - will no longer make use of the same public key to verify subsequent messages X -- GPG: 4096R/1318EFAC5FBBDBCE git://github.com/infinity0/pubkeys.git _______________________________________________ Messaging mailing list [email protected] https://moderncrypto.org/mailman/listinfo/messaging
