Friday, October 20, 2017

System and methods for UICC-based secure communication

System and methods for UICC-based secure communication US 9461993 B2
System and methods for uicc-based secure communication US 20150222631 A1

ABSTRACT
A system that incorporates the subject disclosure may include, for example, instructions which when executed cause a device processor to perform operations comprising sending a service request to a remote management server; receiving from the management server an authentication management function and an encryption key generator for execution by a secure element and an encryption engine for execution by a secure device processor, sending a request to establish a communication session with a remote device; and communicating with the remote device via a channel established using an application server. The secure element and the secure device processor authenticate each other using a mutual authentication keyset. The secure element, the secure device processor and the device processor each have a security level associated therewith; the security level associated with the secure device processor is intermediate between that of the secure element and that of the device processor. Other embodiments are disclosed.

Reference
1"3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Core Network and Terminals; Characteristics of the Universal Subscriber Identity Module (USIM) application", Release 11, 2012.
2"3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Core Network and Terminals; Remote APDU Structure for (U)SIM Toolkit applications", Release 10, 2012.
3"3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Core Network and Terminals; Secured packet structure for (Universal) Subscriber Identity Module (U)SIM Toolkit applications", Release 10, 2012.
4"3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Core Network and Terminals; UICC-terminal interface; Physical and logical characteristics", Release 10, 2011.
5"3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical Specification Group Core Network and Terminals; Universal Subscriber Identity Module (USIM) Application Toolkit (USAT)", Release 11, 2012.
6"GlobalPlatform Card Confidential Card Content Management Card Specification v2.2-Amendment A", 2011.
7"GlobalPlatform Card Contactless Services Card Specification v2.2-Amendment C", 2012.
8"GlobalPlatform Card Remote Application Management over HTTP Card Specification v2.2-Amendment B", 2012.
9"GlobalPlatform Card Security Upgrade for Card Content Management Card Specification v 2.2-Amendment E", 2011.
10"GlobalPlatform Card Specification", Version 2.2.1, 2011.
11"GlobalPlatform Card Technology Secure Channel Protocol 03 Card Specification v 2.2-Amendment D", 2009.
12"GlobalPlatform Device Secure Element Remote Application Management", May 2011.
13"GlobalPlatform Device Technology Secure Element Access Control", Version 1.0, May 2012.
14"GlobalPlatform Device Technology TEE System Architecture", Dec. 2011.
15"GlobalPlatform Key Management System", Functional Requirements, Nov. 2003.
16"GlobalPlatform System Messaging Specification for Management of Mobile-NFC Services", Feb. 2011.
17"Over-The-Air Platform Security Review", Mandiant Intelligent Information Security, 6 pgs., Aug. 17, 2010.
18
Farhat, Farshid, Somayeh Salimi, and Ahmad Salahi. "Private Identification, Authentication and Key Agreement Protocol with Security Mode Setup" IACR Cryptology ePrint Archive 2011 (2011): 45.
19"Reprogrammable SIMs: Technology, Evolution and Implications", csmg, Sep. 25, 2012.
20
"Secure Authentication for Mobile Internet Services"-Sim Alliance, Dec. 2011 http://simalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/12-01-01-WP-SIMallianceSecureAuthentication-EN-V1.1.pdf.
21"Smart Cards; Card Application Tookit (CAT)", Release 11, 2012.
22"Smart Cards; ETSI numbering system for telecommunication application providers", Release 11, 2011.
23"Smart Cards; Machine to Machine UICC; Physical and logical characteristics", Release 9, 2011.
24"Smart Cards; Remote APDU structure for UICC based applications", Release 11, 2012.
25"Smart Cards; Secured packet structure for UICC based applications", Release 11, 2012.
26"Smart Cards; Security mechanisms for UICC based Applications-Functional requirements", Release 8, 2008.
27"Smart Cards; UICC Application Programming Interface (UICC API) for Java Card(TM)", Release 9, 2012.
28"Smart Cards; UICC Application Programming Interface (UICC API) for Java Card™", Release 9, 2012.
29"Smart Cards; UICC-Terminal Interface; Physical and logical characteristics", Release 10, 2011, 179 pages.
30"The OTA Platform in the World of LTE", 14 pgs., Jan. 2011.
31"Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS); UICC-terminal interface; Physical and logical characteristics", Release 10, 2011.
32Chen, "An efficient end-to-end security mechanism for IP multimedia subsystem", Computer Communications, 2008, vol. 31.18, pp. 4259-4268.
33Dodson, Ben et al., "Snap2Pass: Consumer-Friendly Challenge-Response Authentication with a Phone", http://prpl.stanford.edu/papers/soups10j.pdf, Apr. 30, 2010.
34Global Platform, "Secure Element Remote Application Management", Version 1.0, May 2011.
35Imhontu, et al., "A survey on near field communication in mobile phones & PDAs", Dissertation Halmstad University, 2010. http://hh.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:385433/FULLTEXT01.
36Kim, Jong-Min et al., "A Study of Coupons issuance System Considering of User Convenience Based on NFC", 3rd International Conference on Computer Science and Information Technology (ICCSIT'2013) Jan. 4-5, 2013 Bali (Indonesia). http://psrcentre.org/images/extraimages/113118.pdf.
37Kounelis, Ioannis et al., "Secure Middleware for Mobile Phones and UICC Applications", Mobile Wireless Middleware, Operating Systems, and Applications, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012, 143-152.
38Kounelis, Ioannis et al., "Security of service requests for cloud based m-commerce", MIPRO, 2012 Proceedings of the 35th International Convention, IEEE, 2012.
39Meyerstein, et al., "Security Aspects of Smart Cards vs. Embedded Security in Machine-to-Machine (M2M) Advanced Mobile Network Applications", InterDigital Communications Corporation LLC, First International ICST Conference: MobiSec 2009, Security and Privacy in Mobile Information and Communication Systems, p. 214-225, Jun. 3-5, 2009.
40Nagalakshmi, et al., "Modified Protocols for Internet Key Exchange (IKE) Using Public Encryption and Signature Keys", Information Technology: New Generations (ITNG), 2011 Eighth International Conference on, 2011, pp. 376, 381.
41Zhang, et al., "Cryptographic Key Agreement Protocol Simulation", Semantics Knowledge and Grid (SKG), 2010 Sixth International Conference on, 2010, pp. 418, 419.

Monday, October 16, 2017

Aesthetic Value of a Photo


Aesthetic Rating for Photos


The developed engine gets the image and outputs a score showing the amount of the beauty inside the image! The code is also working on Android/iOS platform. The engine speed is good enough which makes it suitable for a real-time engine. The core computes aesthetic features from the image, and estimates the aesthetic score. Check out > ACQUINE
The contributors: Jia Li, James Wang, Farshid Farhat.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Contention-Aware Game-theoretic Model for Heterogeneous Resource Assignment

CAGE: A Contention-Aware Game-theoretic Model for Heterogeneous Resource Assignment


Traditional resource management systems rely on a centralized approach to manage users running on each resource. The centralized resource management system is not scalable for large-scale servers as the number of users running on shared resources is increasing dramatically and the centralized manager may not have enough information about applications' need. In this paper we propose a distributed game-theoretic resource management approach using market auction mechanism to find optimal strategy in a resource competition game. The applications learn through repeated interactions to choose their action on choosing the shared resources. Specifically, we look into two case studies of cache competition game and main processor and co-processor congestion game. We enforce costs for each resource and derive bidding strategy. Accurate evaluation of the proposed approach show that our distributed allocation is scalable and outperforms the static and traditional approaches.

Draft > CAGE