Abstract
Recently, Hwang et al. [1] showed that the authenticated group key agreement protocol proposed by Dutta and Barua [2] suffers from an impersonation attack and proposed an improvement to fix the problem. The goal of this paper is to prove that both the scheme of [2] and its improved version have another security weakness. In [2], it is claimed that the protocol has the ability to detect the presence of a corrupted group member so that if an invalid message is sent, then this can be detected by all legitimate members of the group. In this paper, we show that this claim is not true even in the improved version. We prove that two malicious participants can prohibit legitimate participants from obtaining the same shared key and remain completely unnoticed.
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