
In article <199607172345.QAA08995@jobe.shell.portal.com>, Hal <hfinney@shell.portal.com> wrote:
Crypto 96 is coming up in about a month.
Yeah, should be good fun -- see you there! I just wanted to point out that many of the papers you mentioned below are available on the Web, if you want to preview them. (Please excuse me if any of the URLs are wrong-- I'm logged in via a slowish link, so I've just copied the URLs from my bookmarks without checking them.)
Anonymous Communication and Anonymous Cash Daniel Simon, Microsoft, USA
http://pct.microsoft.com/research.html I think?
The Dark Side of 'Black-Box' Cryptography, or: Why Should We Trust Capstone? Adam Young, Columbia Univ., USA Moti Yung, IBM, USA
http://www.cs.columbia.edu:80/~ayoung/ and discussed on sci.crypt and sci.crypt.research.
Timing Attacks on Implementations of Diffie-Hellman, RSA, DSS, and Other Systems Paul Kocher, Stanford, USA
http://www.cryptography.com/ for an early draft.
Key-Schedule Cryptanalysis of IDEA, G-DES, GOST, SAFER, and Triple-DES John Kelsey, Counterpane Systems, USA Bruce Schneier, Counterpane Systems, USA David Wagner, Univ. California at Berkeley, USA
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~daw/me.html I wouldn't call it a ``big new result''; it talks about differential related-key attacks.