While 2-party public key cryptography is very well laid out in .net framework going n-party concerns me a lot. For instance securing a two-party video-conf. communication is quite easy:
1) Each party generate session specific RSA key pairs and get their public-keys signed by a trusted authority (i.e. a trusted server).
2) Eachy party exchange keys using ECDiffieHellmanCng
thus the connection is now both authentic and secure (thinking that they use Vista/W7).
Now adding a 3rd participant to this communication will not work because key exchange algorithms are designed to derive a shared secret from 2 public keys only (especially using .NET and BouncyCastle). So the question is, how would you go about implementing a n-party public key cryptography schema which is still authentic (i.e. resistant to man in the middle attack) and secure (i.e. secure from eavesdropping).
Edit: Currently the ideas are as below, I'll go ahead and implement the most popular one as a part of the NBusy.Communicator library:
- Use a two-party communication scheme where one party acts as a federation server.
- Initiate a two-party communication and let one party to authenticate third-parties and share the secret/symmetric key.
- Use Multi-Party Key Agreement Scheme.
Edit2: I'm going with the "n-Party Diffie Hellman" algorithm, similar to the one described here but with some modifications: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/cs/diffy_helman.aspx