Abstract— Various situations exist in which enhanced security procedures require that two or more people work together and authenticate at the same time. For example, police personnel or security guards carrying cash must always work in pairs so that if one of them is incapacitated, the other person can complete the mission. In principle, this also enables one partner to stop the other from carrying out any illegal act. However, the question remains as to how a manager can verify that two people are actually working together. We propose a simultaneous authentication system that utilizes smartphones, Twitter, and a cross-password technique to verify whether two persons are really at the same place at the same time; that is, working together cooperatively.
Index Terms— Cross-password technique, enhanced security, simultaneous authentication, Twitter.
The authors are with Kanagawa Institute of Technology, Japan (e-mail: gaku.kamoto@gmail.com, gintonic@sea.plala.or.jp, manabu@nw.kanagawa-it.ac.jp).
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Cite: Kenta Soneda, Akane Ito, and Manabu Okamoto, " Simultaneous Authentication System for Cooperation Verification," International Journal of Information and Electronics Engineering vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 446-449, 2015.