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Definitions and Terminology
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Z public keyThat key of an entity’s asymmetric key pair which tan be made public. source: ISO11770-1, 1996 That key of an entity's asymmetric key pair which can be made public. NOTE – In the case of an asymmetric signature scheme the public key defines the verification transformation. In the case of an asymmetric encipherment system the public key defines the encipherment transformation. A key that is "publicly known" is not necessarily globally available. The key may only be available to all members of a pre-specified group. source: ISO13888-1, 2004 that key of an entity’s asymmetric key pair which can be made public. NOTE In the case of an asymmetric signature system the public key defines the verification transformation. In the case of an asymmetric encipherment system the public key defines the encipherment transformation. A key that is ’publicly known’ is not necessarily globally available. The key may only be available to all members of a pre-specified group. source: ISO15946-3, 2002 that key of an entity’s asymmetric key pair which can be made public [ISO/IEC 11770-1:1996]. source: ISO18033-1, 2005 that key of an entity’s asymmetric key pair which can be made public. NOTE In the case of an asymmetric signature system the public key defines the verification transformation. In the case of an asymmetric encipherment system the public key defines the encipherment transformation. A key that is ’publicly known’ is not necessarily globally available. The key may only be available to all members of a pre-specified group. source: ISO19790, 2006 that key of an entity’s asymmetric key pair which can be made public. [ISO/IEC 9798-1: 1997] source: ISO9796-2, 2002 that key of an entity’s asymmetric key pair which can be made public. NOTE - In the case of an asymmetric signature system the public key defines the verification transformation. In the case of an asymmetric encipherment system the public key defines the encipherment transformation. A key that is ‘publicly known’ is not necessarily globally available. The key may only be available to all members of a prespecified group. source: ISO9798-1, 1997
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