provable secure cryptosystem - definition. What is provable secure cryptosystem
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

Damgaard-Jurik cryptosystem; Damgaard–Jurik cryptosystem; Damgård-Jurik cryptosystem; Damgard–Jurik cryptosystem; Damgard-Jurik cryptosystem

Goldwasser–Micali cryptosystem         
ASYMMETRIC KEY ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM
Goldwasser-Micali; Goldwasser-Micali encryption; Goldwasser-Micali cryptosystem; Goldwasser-Micali encryption scheme
The Goldwasser–Micali (GM) cryptosystem is an asymmetric key encryption algorithm developed by Shafi Goldwasser and Silvio Micali in 1982. GM has the distinction of being the first probabilistic public-key encryption scheme which is provably secure under standard cryptographic assumptions.
Secure attention key         
SPECIAL KEY COMBINATION WHICH INVOKES A TRUSTED LOGIN PROCESS
Secure attention sequence; SAS secure attention sequence; Secure Attention Sequence; Secure Access Key
A secure attention key (SAK) or secure attention sequence (SAS) is a special key or key combination to be pressed on a computer keyboard before a login screen which must, to the user, be completely trustworthy. The operating system kernel, which interacts directly with the hardware, is able to detect whether the secure attention key has been pressed.
Provable         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Provability; Disprovability; Provable (disambiguation); Disprovable; Provability (disambiguation)
·adj Capable of being proved; demonstrable.

ويكيبيديا

Damgård–Jurik cryptosystem

The Damgård–Jurik cryptosystem is a generalization of the Paillier cryptosystem. It uses computations modulo n s + 1 {\displaystyle n^{s+1}} where n {\displaystyle n} is an RSA modulus and s {\displaystyle s} a (positive) natural number. Paillier's scheme is the special case with s = 1 {\displaystyle s=1} . The order φ ( n s + 1 ) {\displaystyle \varphi (n^{s+1})} (Euler's totient function) of Z n s + 1 {\displaystyle Z_{n^{s+1}}^{*}} can be divided by n s {\displaystyle n^{s}} . Moreover, Z n s + 1 {\displaystyle Z_{n^{s+1}}^{*}} can be written as the direct product of G × H {\displaystyle G\times H} . G {\displaystyle G} is cyclic and of order n s {\displaystyle n^{s}} , while H {\displaystyle H} is isomorphic to Z n {\displaystyle Z_{n}^{*}} . For encryption, the message is transformed into the corresponding coset of the factor group G × H / H {\displaystyle G\times H/H} and the security of the scheme relies on the difficulty of distinguishing random elements in different cosets of H {\displaystyle H} . It is semantically secure if it is hard to decide if two given elements are in the same coset. Like Paillier, the security of Damgård–Jurik can be proven under the decisional composite residuosity assumption.