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RCCA security
Security notion in cryptography From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Replayable CCA security (RCCA security) is a security notion in cryptography that relaxes the older notion of Security against Chosen-Ciphertext Attack (CCA, more precisely adaptive security notion CCA2): all CCA-secure systems are RCCA secure but the converse is not true. The claim is that for a lot of use cases, CCA is too strong and RCCA suffices.[1] Nowadays a certain amount of cryptographic scheme are proved RCCA-secure instead of CCA secure. It was introduced in 2003 in a research publication by Ran Canetti, Hugo Krawczyk and Jesper B. Nielsen.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (March 2019) |
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