Inductive Analysis of the Internet Protocol TLS

07/17/2019
by   Lawrence C. Paulson, et al.
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Internet browsers use security protocols to protect sensitive messages. An inductive analysis of TLS (a descendant of SSL 3.0) has been performed using the theorem prover Isabelle. Proofs are based on higher-order logic and make no assumptions concerning beliefs or finiteness. All the obvious security goals can be proved; session resumption appears to be secure even if old session keys have been compromised. The proofs suggest minor changes to simplify the analysis. TLS, even at an abstract level, is much more complicated than most protocols that researchers have verified. Session keys are negotiated rather than distributed, and the protocol has many optional parts. Nevertheless, the resources needed to verify TLS are modest: six man-weeks of effort and three minutes of processor time.

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