07031: Master Electronic Key for Multi-Purpose Authentication
Case ID:
TEC2007-0031
Web Published:
7/21/2014
Description:
People carry numerous keys, including physical
keys, key cards for doors, parking and other use, garage door openers, and
wireless fobs for cars, and they also use passwords or physical tokens for
unlocking laptops and cell phones. It would be a great convenience to
consolidate these into a single electronic key that could gain access to all of
these things. This is akin to a hardware master key that can open multiple
locks.
Description
This technology provides a novel
user-authentication approach for pervasive computing environments. A person uses
a single device, the master key, that aggregates all of his/her digital forms of
access tokens for user authentication. The master key discovers and selects
proper tokens for its owner. With an emphasis on usability, the master key
secures authentication and protects privacy information from outsiders and
insiders.
When the master key is activated it initiates an
authentication process by sending a broadcast message together with a challenge,
which may be a one-time code word, to the set of locks for which it has keys. If
a lock receives the message and finds itself in the set, it responds with its
own challenge. Then the master key device responds with a coded key to operate
the lock.
Different protocols are provided to support three types of
keys for different key-lock relationships. A unique key is one that may be owned
by one or a few owners to open a lock. A group key is one that a lock is able to
authenticate as a key, but key owners are not differentiable. An individual key
is one for which a specific key owner among a group can be identified.
A
focus of this invention is to maintain individual privacy by limiting the
information the master key device gives out, including when attempting to use it
to gain access to areas or services for which it is not
authorized.
Benefits
- Security: Mutual authentication is employed to identify
and verify both key owners and locks.
- Privacy: Identifications are not sent as clear text. Only
code words generated from a shared secret are sent.
- Efficient
protocols: Only three messages are required to discover locks, identify a
key owner, and finish mutual authentication.
- Convenience: Users do not have to memorize relationships
between locks and keys.
- Password
protection: People tradeoff convenience for security. For example, they
may use the same password for multiple devices or use simple passwords. This
invention provides a convenient means to have different and more-complex
passwords.
- No internet
connection required: This enables flexible and reliable usage, such as
unlocking a car or a mobile device, even when out of range of wireless
networks.
Applications
Anywhere digital credentials (electronic keys) can
be used for authentication, for example: door keys (house, office, secure area
within a building), car keys, garage door opener, parking card, and access
control for computers, PDAs, and cell phones.
The master key can replace
keys, magnetic stripe cards, smart cards, RFID tags, wireless remote access
fobs, and other tokens.
Development
Status
A prototype system has been built.
IP Protection
Status
Patent pending
Patent Information:
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For Information, Contact:
Raymond Devito
Technology Manager
Michigan State University - Test
517-355-2186
devitora@msu.edu