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Vehicular networks have attracted extensive attentions in recent years for their promises in improving safety and enabling other value-added services. Security and privacy are two integrated issues in the deployment of vehicular networks. Privacy-preserving authentication is a key technique in addressing these two issues. We propose a random keyset based authentication protocol that preserves user privacy under the zero-trust policy, in which no central authority is trusted with the user privacy. We show that the protocol can efficiently authenticate users without compromising their privacy with theoretical analysis. Malicious user identification and key revocation are also described
Xi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.