In the second edition the authors added a complete description of the AES, an extended section on cryptographic hash functions, and new sections on random oracle proofs and public-key encryption schemes that are provably secure against adaptively-chosen-ciphertext attacks. The third edition is a further substantive extension, with new topics added, including: elliptic curve cryptography; Paillier encryption; quantum cryptography; the new SHA-3 standard for cryptographic hash functions; a considerably extended section on electronic elections and Internet voting; mix nets; and zero-knowledge proofs of shuffles.
The book is appropriate for undergraduate and graduate students in computer science, mathematics, and engineering.
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"This is a thorough introductory text on cryptography from an engineering viewpoint. It provides a good overview of the whole subject, including secret-key ('symmetric') and public-key methods, hash functions, and signing. There's a 90-page appendix that summarizes the mathematics needed (mostly number theory, with some abstract algebra and probability).The book is well-written and easy to follow." (Allen Stenger, MAA Reviews, maa.org, April, 2016)
"Delfs and Knebl in this book focus on the mathematical aspects of cryptography. ... this book is best suited for a graduate course in mathematics. ... recommend this book for readers with strong mathematical backgrounds who are interested in the foundations of the field." (Burkhard Englert, Computing Reviews, March, 2016)