16.04.2024 | Juliane Krämer, Universität Regensburg


Biografie

Juliane Krämer ist Professorin für Datensicherheit und Kryptographie an der Universität Regensburg. Zuvor war sie Nachwuchsgruppenleiterin und Post Doc an der TU Darmstadt, nachdem sie an der TU Berlin in angewandter Kryptographie promoviert hatte. In ihrer Forschung beschäftigt sie sich mit vielfältigen Aspekten der Post-Quantum-Kryptpgraphie mit einem Fokus auf der physikalischen Sicherheit der Verfahren. 


On the physical security of multivariate signature schemes

Abstract

Multivariate signature schemes are interesting for use cases where post-quantum security and short signatures are required. The schemes UOV and Rainbow are the most prominent representatives from this family. Due to its efficiency, Rainbow has attracted more attention of researchers than UOV over the last few years and it became a finalist in the third round of the NIST PQC standardization process. After a groundbreaking result regarding its security, however, it is no longer in the focus of current research and UOV has been submitted to the 4th round for signature schemes in the NIST process.

In this talk, Juliane Krämer will present a line of research that targets the physical security of UOV and Rainbow, i.e., their security with respect to side channel and fault attacks, and discuss some of the most relevant attack vectors for multivariate signature schemes.