Patents by Inventor Jill C. Pipher

Jill C. Pipher has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7913088
    Abstract: A signing technique of a disclosed identification/digital signature method hereof uses a mixing system based on multiplication in a ring and reduction modulo an ideal q in that ring, while a disclosed verification technique uses special properties of products of elements whose validity depends on elementary probability theory. The security of the identification/digital signature scheme comes from the interaction of reduction modulo q and the difficulty of forming products with special properties. In an embodiment of the identification/digital signature scheme hereof that employs a quotient ring of polynomials, the security also relies on the experimentally observed fact that for most lattices, it is very difficult to find a vector whose length is only a little bit longer than the shortest vector, and it is also difficult to find a lattice vector that is quite close to a randomly chosen nonlattice vector.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 20, 2007
    Date of Patent: March 22, 2011
    Assignee: NTRU Cryptosystmes, Inc.
    Inventors: Jeffrey Hoffstein, Nicholas A. Howgrave-Graham, Jill C. Pipher, Joseph H. Silverman, William J. Whyte
  • Publication number: 20090070590
    Abstract: A signing technique of a disclosed identification/digital signature method hereof uses a mixing system based on multiplication in a ring and reduction modulo an ideal q in that ring, while a disclosed verification technique uses special properties of products of elements whose validity depends on elementary probability theory. The security of the identification/digital signature scheme comes from the interaction of reduction modulo q and the difficulty of forming products with special properties. In an embodiment of the identification/digital signature scheme hereof that employs a quotient ring of polynomials, the security also relies on the experimentally observed fact that for most lattices, it is very difficult to find a vector whose length is only a little bit longer than the shortest vector, and it is also difficult to find a lattice vector that is quite close to a randomly chosen nonlattice vector.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 20, 2007
    Publication date: March 12, 2009
    Inventors: Jeffrey Hoffstein, Nicholas A. Howgrave-Graham, Jill C. Pipher, Joseph H. Silverman, William J. Whyte
  • Patent number: 7308097
    Abstract: A method, system and apparatus for performing user identification, digital signatures and other secure communication functions in which keys are chosen essentially at random from a large set of vectors and key lengths are comparable to the key lengths in other common identification and digital signature schemes at comparable security levels. The signing technique of an embodiment of the identification/digital signature scheme hereof uses a mixing system based on multiplication in a ring and reduction modulo an ideal q in that ring; while the verification technique uses special properties of products of elements whose validity depends on elementary probability theory. The security of the identification/digital signature scheme comes from the interaction of reduction modulo q and the difficulty of forming products with special properties.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 6, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 11, 2007
    Assignee: NTRU Cryptosystems, Inc.
    Inventors: Jeffrey Hoffstein, Nicholas A. Howgrave-Graham, Jill C. Pipher, Joseph H. Silverman, William J. Whyte
  • Publication number: 20030120929
    Abstract: A method, system and apparatus for performing user identification, digital signatures and other secure communication functions in which keys are chosen essentially at random from a large set of vectors and key lengths are comparable to the key lengths in other common identification and digital signature schemes at comparable security levels. The signing technique of an embodiment of the identification/digital signature scheme hereof uses a mixing system based on multiplication in a ring and reduction modulo an ideal q in that ring; while the verification technique uses special properties of products of elements whose validity depends on elementary probability theory. The security of the identification/digital signature scheme comes from the interaction of reduction modulo q and the difficulty of forming products with special properties.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 6, 2002
    Publication date: June 26, 2003
    Applicant: NTRU Cryptosystems, Incorporated
    Inventors: Jeffrey Hoffstein, Nicholas A. Howgrave-Graham, Jill C. Pipher, Joseph H. Silverman, William J. Whyte