The inductive approach to verifying cryptographic protocols
Journal of Computer Security
The verification of an industrial payment protocol: the SET purchase phase
Proceedings of the 9th ACM conference on Computer and communications security
Rewrite Methods for Clausal and Non-Clausal Theorem Proving
Proceedings of the 10th Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Programming
Towards the Formal Verification of Electronic Commerce Protocols
CSFW '97 Proceedings of the 10th IEEE workshop on Computer Security Foundations
Model Checking the Secure Electronic Transaction (SET) Protocol
MASCOTS '99 Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Modeling, Analysis and Simulation of Computer and Telecommunication Systems
Flaw and modification of the iKP electronic payment protocols
Information Processing Letters
Formal analysis of the iKP electronic payment protocols
ISSS'02 Proceedings of the 2002 Mext-NSF-JSPS international conference on Software security: theories and systems
Modeling and verification of real-time systems based on equations
Science of Computer Programming
Verifying Design with Proof Scores
Verified Software: Theories, Tools, Experiments
Induction-guided falsification
ICFEM'06 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Formal Methods and Software Engineering
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We have formally verified that a payment protocol, which is an abstract SET payment protocol but retains the essential part of the SET payment protocol, has several desired properties.Among the properties are that if the payment gateway authorizes a payment, then both cardholder and merchant concerned always agree on the payment, and at this time the two principles also agree on the transaction amount.