A novel OTP based tripartite authentication scheme

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sajaad Ahmed Lone ◽  
Ajaz Hussain Mir

Purpose Because of the continued use of mobile, cloud and the internet of things, the possibility of data breaches is on the increase. A secure authentication and authorization strategy is a must for many of today’s applications. Authentication schemes based on knowledge and tokens, although widely used, lead to most security breaches. While providing various advantages, biometrics are also subject to security threats. Using multiple factors together for authentication provides more certainty about a user’s identity; thus, leading to a more reliable, effective and more difficult for an adversary to intrude. This study aims to propose a novel, secure and highly stable multi-factor one-time password (OTP) authentication solution for mobile environments, which uses all three authentication factors for user authentication. Design/methodology/approach The proposed authentication scheme is implemented as a challenge-response authentication where three factors (username, device number and fingerprint) are used as a secret key between the client and the server. The current scheme adopts application-based authentication and guarantees data confidentiality and improved security because of the integration of biometrics with other factors and each time new challenge value by the server to client for OTP generation. Findings The proposed authentication scheme is implemented on real android-based mobile devices, tested on real users; experimental results show that the proposed authentication scheme attains improved performance. Furthermore, usability evaluation proves that proposed authentication is effective, efficient and convenient for users in mobile environments. Originality/value The proposed authentication scheme can be adapted as an effective authentication scheme to accessing critical information using android smartphones.

2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young-Long Chen ◽  
Chung-Ming Cheng

Purpose – Wu et al.'s scheme has a security problem that is related to anonymity: attackers can determine by interception the identity of a legal user. This paper aims to propose a new secure authentication which combines a chaos system with an Arnold cat map. The scheme improves upon that of the Wu et al.'s scheme. The scheme proposed herein provides for full anonymity and improves the security of authentication messages for wireless communications. Design/methodology/approach – A novel scheme that integrates a chaos sequence is used with an Arnold cat map for authentication messages. Authentication messages are shuffled using an Arnold cat map to improve the security of authentication in wireless communications. An analytic approach based on a chaos sequence with an Arnold cat map is developed to secure authentication. The proposed scheme is presented in this study to overcome the inherent drawbacks of existing designs. Findings – The integrated scheme involves two steps. First, a chaos map is used to generate a set of chaos sequences that is added to the authentication messages. Second, the authentication messages are shuffled using an Arnold cat map. The main feature of the proposed design is such that the chaos systems are sensitive to the initial values of conditions. Sensitivity will lead to long-term behavior unpredictability to reflect the non-linear dynamic systems. Furthermore, to increase the complexity of the authentication message, the authors also use an Arnold cat map. Originality/value – The proposed scheme provides functions that include full anonymity properties, protection of the real identity of the user, one-time password properties, timestamp benefits and sufficient complexity of the password. The analysis shows that the proposed scheme exhibits the advantages of the chaos system and is more secure than previous schemes. Notably, the proposed scheme is effective for wireless communications.


Author(s):  
Yang Gao ◽  
Yincheng Jin ◽  
Jagmohan Chauhan ◽  
Seokmin Choi ◽  
Jiyang Li ◽  
...  

With the rapid growth of wearable computing and increasing demand for mobile authentication scenarios, voiceprint-based authentication has become one of the prevalent technologies and has already presented tremendous potentials to the public. However, it is vulnerable to voice spoofing attacks (e.g., replay attacks and synthetic voice attacks). To address this threat, we propose a new biometric authentication approach, named EarPrint, which aims to extend voiceprint and build a hidden and secure user authentication scheme on earphones. EarPrint builds on the speaking-induced body sound transmission from the throat to the ear canal, i.e., different users will have different body sound conduction patterns on both sides of ears. As the first exploratory study, extensive experiments on 23 subjects show the EarPrint is robust against ambient noises and body motions. EarPrint achieves an Equal Error Rate (EER) of 3.64% with 75 seconds enrollment data. We also evaluate the resilience of EarPrint against replay attacks. A major contribution of EarPrint is that it leverages two-level uniqueness, including the body sound conduction from the throat to the ear canal and the body asymmetry between the left and the right ears, taking advantage of earphones' paring form-factor. Compared with other mobile and wearable biometric modalities, EarPrint is a low-cost, accurate, and secure authentication solution for earphone users.


2021 ◽  
Vol 185 ◽  
pp. 107731
Author(s):  
Zeeshan Ali ◽  
Shehzad Ashraf Chaudhry ◽  
Khalid Mahmood ◽  
Sahil Garg ◽  
Zhihan Lv ◽  
...  

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