Hong-Sheng Zhou


 
 

PhD Candidate

Crypto-DRM Lab

Computer Science & Engineering

University of Connecticut

Contact
phone: 860-208-8345
email: hszhou @ cse-uconn-edu
office: ITEB 215 @ Storrs campus


About Me
I am studying Cryptography under supervision of Professor Aggelos Kiayias. My thesis focuses on privacy primitives in the universal composition framework. I am also very interested in cryptographic aspects of digital rights management. Here is my CV.    


Publications dblp eprint

  1. Somewhat Non-Committing Encryption and Efficient Adaptively Secure Oblivious Transfer.
    Juan A. Garay, Daniel Wichs and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    CRYPTO 2009 -- Advances of Cryptology.

  2. Sound and Fine-grain Specification of Cryptographic Tasks.
    Juan A. Garay, Aggelos Kiayias and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    Manuscript.

  3. Secure Function Collection with Sublinear Storage.
    Maged H. Ibrahim, Aggelos Kiayias, Moti Yung and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    ICALP 2009 --  36th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming.

  4. Zero-Knowledge Proofs with Witness Elimination.
    Aggelos Kiayias and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    PKC 2009 -- 12th Public Key Cryptography.

  5. Equivocal Blind Signatures and Adaptive UC-Security.
    Aggelos Kiayias and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    TCC 2008 -- 5th Theory of Cryptography Conference.

  6. Trading Static for Adaptive Security in Universally Composable Zero-Knowledge.
    Aggelos Kiayias and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    ICALP 2007 --  34th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming.

  7. Hidden Identity-Based Signatures.
    Aggelos Kiayias and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    FC 2007 --  11th Financial Cryptography and Data Security.
    Journal version in
    IET Information Security.

  8. Concurrent Blind Signatures Without Random Oracles.
    Aggelos Kiayias and Hong-Sheng Zhou.
    SCN 2006 --  5th Security and Cryptography for Networks.


Program Committees

  1. -ASIACRYPT 2010 (December 5-9, 2010, Singapore; submission deadline May 20, 2010)

  2. -CANS 2009 (December 12-14, 2009, Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan)


Random Links

  1. UCL Call for papers

  2. IACR

  3. Random Bits and Computational Complexity

  4. NYU Crypto Reading Group

  5. CRA Job Announcements