Public Key Infrastructure
Trust on the Internet is underpinned by the Public Key Infrastructure (PKI). PKI grants online parties the ability to authenticate themselves by issuing digital certificates, providing the foundation for encrypted and authentic communication.
The security and resilience of the PKIs used to secure the Internet is a complex and fruitful area of study.
Publications
2018Is the web ready for OSCP must-staple?
Proceedings of the Internet Measurement Conference 2018, pp. 105-118. 2018.
Taejoong Chung,
Jay Lok,
Balakrishnan Chandrasekaran,
David Choffnes,
Dave Levin,
Bruce M. Maggs,
Alan Mislove,
John Rula,
Nick Sullivan,
Christo Wilson
2019RPKI is coming of age: A longitudinal study of RPKI deployment and invalid route origins
Proceedings of the Internet Measurement Conference, pp. 406-419. 2019.
Taejoong Chung,
Emile Aben,
Tim Bruijnzeels,
Balakrishnan Chandrasekaran,
David Choffnes,
Dave Levin,
Bruce M. Maggs,
Alan Mislove,
Roland van Rijswijk-Deij,
John Rula,
Nick Sullivan
2019Does certificate transparency break the web? Measuring adoption and error rate
2019 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP), pp. 211-226. 2019.
Emily Stark,
Ryan Sleevi,
Rijad Muminovic,
Devon O'Brien,
Eran Messeri,
Adriana Porter Felt,
Brendan McMillion,
Parisa Tabriz
2022RFC 9180: Hybrid Public Key Encryption
Internet Research Task Force (IRTF). 2022.
Richard Barnes,
Karthik Bhargavan,
Benjamin Lipp,
Christopher A. Wood