2009
DOI: 10.1109/tvt.2008.2007983
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PPAB: A Privacy-Preserving Authentication and Billing Architecture for Metropolitan Area Sharing Networks

Abstract: Abstract-Wireless metropolitan area sharing networks (WMSNs) are wide-area wireless networks with nodes owned and managed by independent wireless Internet service providers (WISPs). To support seamless roaming in emerging WMSNs, in this paper, we propose a localized and distributed authentication and billing architecture that aims at enabling efficient and privacy-preserving mutual authentication between mobile users (MUs) and WISPs. User anonymity and identity privacy can be protected, even in the presence of… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…To improve the handover authentication process, privacy was considered in Tsai et al [21] protocol, Fu et al [22] protocol, and Zhu et al [23] protocol. These protocols preserved the privacy of the clients with a three-way handshake to complete the handover authentication process; however, to complete the three-way handshake protocol, it suffered from high computational cost.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To improve the handover authentication process, privacy was considered in Tsai et al [21] protocol, Fu et al [22] protocol, and Zhu et al [23] protocol. These protocols preserved the privacy of the clients with a three-way handshake to complete the handover authentication process; however, to complete the three-way handshake protocol, it suffered from high computational cost.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An available idle terminal may act as an access node (i.e., effectively as an ad hoc wireless router) to provide access, directly or via a multihop link, to wireless communications resources such as a 3G cellular network or Wi-Fi, and receive payment for this service. As indicated by Zhu et al (H. Zhu, Lin, Shi, Ho, & Shen, 2009), the MoB approach focuses mostly on sharing wireless resources and does not address the fundamental issue of inter-domain authentication. Also, the limitation of this approach includes the dependency on foreign network's users' availability in trading and accessing the network.…”
Section: Roaming Across Ad Hocmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the advancement of wireless technology, vehicular communication networks, also known as vehicular ad hoc networks (VANETs), are emerging as a promising approach to increase road safety, efficiency, and convenience [1, 2]. Although the primary purpose of vehicular networks is to enable communication-based automotive safety applications, VANETs also allow a wide range of promising applications such as traffic monitoring and data collecting, which are regarded as an important component of future intelligent transportation systems (ITSs).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%