Raymond F. Boyce, Donald D. Chamberlin, et al.
CACM
This paper provides a general treatment of privacy amplification by public discussion, a concept introduced by Bennett, Brassard, and Robert for a special scenario. Privacy amplification is a process that allows two parties to distill a secret key from a common random variable about which an eavesdropper has partial information. The two parties generally know nothing about the eavesdropper's information except that it satisfies a certain constraint. The results have applications to unconditionally secure secret-key agreement protocols and quantum cryptography, and they yield results on wiretap and broadcast channels for a considerably strengthened definition of secrecy capacity. © 1995 IEEE.
Raymond F. Boyce, Donald D. Chamberlin, et al.
CACM
Elizabeth A. Sholler, Frederick M. Meyer, et al.
SPIE AeroSense 1997
Yun Mao, Hani Jamjoom, et al.
CoNEXT 2006
Oliver Bodemer
IBM J. Res. Dev