Handbook of Financial Cryptography and Security

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advanced financial security techniques
Auction Issuer
base
Blind Signature
blind signatures
broadcast
Category=KFF
Category=URY
computing
cryptographic protocols
cryptography protocols
Data Breach
Data Breach Notification
data mining
DFT Coefficient
digital cash
digital identity protection
digital rights management
DNS Server
DRM System
e-cash
electronic voting
electronic voting systems
encryption
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_computing
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Financial Cryptography
homomorphic
human factors
Id Certificate
identity management
John Smiths
key
machine
micropayment system
Micropayment Systems
Non-repudiation Services
nonrepudiation methods
Onion Routing
phishing
Phishing Attacks
privacy preserving methods
public
Public Key
public key infrastructure
regulatory compliance security
SAML
secure transaction design
Steiner Tree
Tpm
trusted
Trusted Computing
Trusted Computing Group
virtual
Watermark Embedding
Watermark Signal
watermarking
Watermarking Scheme
Watermarking System
Withdraw Protocol
zero-knowledge proof

Product details

  • ISBN 9781420059816
  • Weight: 1330g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Aug 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Handbook of Financial Cryptography and Security elucidates the theory and techniques of cryptography and illustrates how to establish and maintain security under the framework of financial cryptography. It applies various cryptographic techniques to auctions, electronic voting, micropayment systems, digital rights, financial portfolios, routing networks, and more.

In the first part, the book examines blind signatures and other important cryptographic techniques with respect to digital cash/e-cash. It also looks at the role of cryptography in auctions and voting, describes properties that can be required of systems implementing value exchange, and presents methods by which selected receivers can decrypt signals sent out to everyone.

The second section begins with a discussion on lowering transaction costs of settling payments so that commerce can occur at the sub-penny level. The book then addresses the challenge of a system solution for the protection of intellectual property, before presenting an application of cryptography to financial exchanges and markets.

Exploring financial cryptography in the real world, the third part discusses the often-complex issues of phishing, privacy and anonymity, and protecting the identity of objects and users.

With a focus on human factors, the final section considers whether systems will elicit or encourage the desired behavior of the participants of the system. It also explains how the law and regulations impact financial cryptography.

In the real world, smart and adaptive adversaries employ all types of means to circumvent inconvenient security restraints. This useful handbook provides answers to general questions about the field of financial cryptography as well as solutions to specific real-world security problems.

Burton Rosenberg is an associate professor of computer science at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida.