updated
authorcu
Mon, 16 Oct 2017 19:11:47 +0100
changeset 551 321877915a05
parent 550 58c3536c5a08
child 552 c1e9a435e16f
updated
handouts/ho05.pdf
handouts/ho05.tex
hws/s3.pdf
style.sty
Binary file handouts/ho05.pdf has changed
--- a/handouts/ho05.tex	Sun Oct 15 21:23:16 2017 +0100
+++ b/handouts/ho05.tex	Mon Oct 16 19:11:47 2017 +0100
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
 \usepackage{../langs}
 
 \begin{document}
-\fnote{\copyright{} Christian Urban, King's College London, 2014, 2016}
+\fnote{\copyright{} Christian Urban, King's College London, 2014, 2016, 2017}
 
 %% the expectation is that anything encrypted today, will be
 %% decrypted in 20 years time
@@ -361,7 +361,7 @@
 talks to $B$. I leave you to argue that $B$ can be sure to
 talk to $A$. Of course these arguments will depend on the
 assumptions that only $A$ and $B$ know the key $K_{AB}$ and
-that nobody can break the encryption unless they have this key
+that nobody can break the encryption
 and that the nonces are fresh each time the protocol is run.
 
 The purpose of the nonces, the random numbers that are sent
Binary file hws/s3.pdf has changed