Pease et al. introduced the problem of Byzantine Generals (BGP) to study the effects of Byzantine faults in distributed protocols for reliable broadcast. It is well known that BGP among n players tolerating up to t faults is (efficiently) possible if and only if n > 3t. To overcome this severe limitation, Pease et al. introduced a variant of BGP, Authenticated Byzantine General (ABG). Here players are supplemented with digital signatures (or similar tools) to thwart the challenge posed by Byzantine faults. Subsequently, they proved that with the use of authentication, fault tolerance of protocols for reliable broadcast can be amazingly increased to n > t (which is a huge improvement over the n > 3t).Byzantine faults are the most generic form of faults. In a network not all faults are always malicious. Some faulty nodes may only leak their data while others are malicious. Motivated from this, we study the problem of ABG in (t b ,t p )-mixed adversary model where the adversary can corrupt up to any t b players actively and control up to any other t p players passively. We prove that in such a setting, ABG over a completely connected synchronous network of n nodes tolerating a (t b ,t p )-adversary is possible if and only if n > 2t b +min(t b , t p ) when t p > 0. Interestingly, our results can also be seen as an attempt to unify the extant literature on BGP and ABG.
Signcryption is a cryptographic primitive that performs encryption and signature in a single logical step, at lower computational cost and communication over heads than the signature-then-encryption. Proxy signcryption schemes are variations of ordinary signcryption schemes and have been useful in many applications where the delegation of rights is quite common. By combining the functionalities of proxy signature scheme and signcryption scheme, in this paper, we proposed a new ID-based proxy signcryption scheme which offers both public verifiability and forward security. The security requirements and performance of the proposed scheme are analyzed.
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