April 20, 2023, 1:10 a.m. | Claude Crépeau, John Stuart

cs.CR updates on arXiv.org arxiv.org

A Zero-Knowledge Protocol (ZKP) allows one party to convince another party of
a fact without disclosing any extra knowledge except the validity of the fact.
For example, it could be used to allow a customer to prove their identity to a
potentially malicious bank machine without giving away private information such
as a personal identification number. This way, any knowledge gained by a
malicious bank machine during an interaction cannot be used later to compromise
the client's banking account. An …

account bank banking client compromise customer fact identification identity important information knowledge machine malicious mips party personal private protocol prove tool

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