Practical everlasting privacy
Myrto Arapinis,Véronique Cortier,Steve Kremer,Mark Ryan +3 more
- 16 Mar 2013
- Vol. 7796, pp 21-40
TL;DR: This paper proposes a definition of practical everlasting privacy and provides the means to characterize what an attacker can break in the future in several cases, and adapt existing tools, in order to allow us to automatically prove everlasting privacy.
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Abstract: Will my vote remain secret in 20 years? This is a natural question in the context of electronic voting, where encrypted votes may be published on a bulletin board for verifiability purposes, but the strength of the encryption is eroded with the passage of time. The question has been addressed through a property referred to as everlasting privacy. Perfect everlasting privacy may be difficult or even impossible to achieve, in particular in remote electronic elections. In this paper, we propose a definition of practical everlasting privacy. The key idea is that in the future, an attacker will be more powerful in terms of computation (he may be able to break the cryptography) but less powerful in terms of the data he can operate on (transactions between a vote client and the vote server may not have been stored).
We formalize our definition of everlasting privacy in the applied-pi calculus. We provide the means to characterize what an attacker can break in the future in several cases. In particular, we model this for perfectly hiding and computationally binding primitives (or the converse), such as Pedersen commitments, and for symmetric and asymmetric encryption primitives. We adapt existing tools, in order to allow us to automatically prove everlasting privacy. As an illustration, we show that several variants of Helios (including Helios with Pedersen commitments) and a protocol by Moran and Naor achieve practical everlasting privacy, using the ProVerif and the AKiSs tools.
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Citations
Automated Verification of Equivalence Properties of Cryptographic Protocols
TL;DR: A novel procedure to verify equivalence properties for a bounded number of sessions of cryptographic protocols that can handle a large set of cryptographic primitives, namely those whose equational theory is generated by an optimally reducing convergent rewrite system.
•Book
Computer security - ESORICS 2010 : 15th European Symposium on Research in Computer Security, Athens, Greece, September 20-22, 2010 : proceedings
Dimitris Gritzalis,Bart Preneel,Marianthi Theoharidou +2 more
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: This book discusses RFID Privacy, Election Verifiability in Electronic Voting Protocols, and Bayesian Nash Equilibria for Network Security Games with Limited Information.
81
Distributed ElGamal à la Pedersen: Application to Helios
Véronique Cortier,David Galindo,Stéphane Glondu,Malika Izabachène +3 more
- 04 Nov 2013
TL;DR: This work describes a fully distributed (with no dealer) threshold cryptosystem suitable for the Helios voting system (in particular, suitable to partial decryption), and proves it secure under the Decisional Diffie-Hellman assumption.
39
•Posted Content
Design of Distributed Voting Systems.
TL;DR: A modification of the proof-of-stake, which enables the usage of common devices, like smartphones or tablets, for the blockchain verification and inclusion of new ballots to the chain, and discusses the occurring problems when designing a secure system.
37
Coercion-Resistant Internet Voting with Everlasting Privacy
Philipp Locher,Philipp Locher,Rolf Haenni,Reto E. Koenig +3 more
- 26 Feb 2016
TL;DR: The cryptographic voting protocol presented in this paper offers public verifiability, everlasting privacy, and coercion-resistance simultaneously.
31
References
Non-Interactive and Information-Theoretic Secure Verifiable Secret Sharing
Torben P. Pedersen
- 11 Aug 1991
TL;DR: It is shown how to distribute a secret to n persons such that each person can verify that he has received correct information about the secret without talking with other persons.
2.9K
An efficient cryptographic protocol verifier based on prolog rules
Bruno Blanchet
- 11 Jun 2001
TL;DR: A new automatic cryptographic protocol verifier based on a simple representation of the protocol by Prolog rules, and on a new efficient algorithm that determines whether a fact can be proved from these rules or not, which proves secrecy properties of the protocols.
1.2K
Mobile values, new names, and secure communication
Martín Abadi,Cédric Fournet +1 more
- 01 Jan 2001
TL;DR: A simple, general extension of the pi calculus with value passing, primitive functions, and equations among terms is introduced, and semantics and proof techniques for this extended language are developed and applied in reasoning about some security protocols.
Coercion-resistant electronic elections
Ari Juels,Dario Catalano,Markus Jakobsson +2 more
- 07 Nov 2005
TL;DR: A model for electronic election schemes that involves a more powerful adversary than previous work that allows the adversary to demand of coerced voters that they vote in a particular manner, abstain from voting, or even disclose their secret keys.
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