Journal Article10.1145/2764465
Remote Data Auditing in Cloud Computing Environments: A Survey, Taxonomy, and Open Issues
Mehdi Sookhak,Abdullah Gani,Hamid Talebian,Adnan Akhunzada,Samee U. Khan,Rajkumar Buyya,Albert Y. Zomaya +6 more
126
TL;DR: This survey aims to investigate similarities and differences of such a framework on the basis of the thematic taxonomy to diagnose significant and explore major outstanding issues in the domain of the distributed clouds.
read more
Abstract: Cloud computing has emerged as a long-dreamt vision of the utility computing paradigm that provides reliable and resilient infrastructure for users to remotely store data and use on-demand applications and services. Currently, many individuals and organizations mitigate the burden of local data storage and reduce the maintenance cost by outsourcing data to the cloud. However, the outsourced data is not always trustworthy due to the loss of physical control and possession over the data. As a result, many scholars have concentrated on relieving the security threats of the outsourced data by designing the Remote Data Auditing (RDA) technique as a new concept to enable public auditability for the stored data in the cloud. The RDA is a useful technique to check the reliability and integrity of data outsourced to a single or distributed servers. This is because all of the RDA techniques for single cloud servers are unable to support data recovery; such techniques are complemented with redundant storage mechanisms. The article also reviews techniques of remote data auditing more comprehensively in the domain of the distributed clouds in conjunction with the presentation of classifying ongoing developments within this specified area. The thematic taxonomy of the distributed storage auditing is presented based on significant parameters, such as scheme nature, security pattern, objective functions, auditing mode, update mode, cryptography model, and dynamic data structure. The more recent remote auditing approaches, which have not gained considerable attention in distributed cloud environments, are also critically analyzed and further categorized into three different classes, namely, replication based, erasure coding based, and network coding based, to present a taxonomy. This survey also aims to investigate similarities and differences of such a framework on the basis of the thematic taxonomy to diagnose significant and explore major outstanding issues.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Posted Content
PORs: Proofs of Retrievability for Large Files
Ari Juels,Burton S. Kaliski +1 more
TL;DR: This paper defines and explores proofs of retrievability (PORs), a POR scheme that enables an archive or back-up service to produce a concise proof that a user can retrieve a target file F, that is, that the archive retains and reliably transmits file data sufficient for the user to recover F in its entirety.
2K
Two Birds with One Stone: Two-Factor Authentication with Security Beyond Conventional Bound
Ding Wang,Ping Wang +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a security model that can accurately capture the practical capabilities of an adversary is defined and a broad set of twelve properties framed as a systematic methodology for comparative evaluation, allowing schemes to be rated across a common spectrum.
529
Security Services Using Blockchains: A State of the Art Survey
TL;DR: In this paper, a survey of blockchain-based approaches for several security services including authentication, confidentiality, privacy and access control list, data and resource provenance, and integrity assurance is presented.
Security Services Using Blockchains: A State of the Art Survey
TL;DR: Insight is given on the use of security services for current applications, to highlight the state of the art techniques that are currently used to provide these services, to describe their challenges, and to discuss how the blockchain technology can resolve these challenges.
298
Blockchain-Based Public Integrity Verification for Cloud Storage against Procrastinating Auditors
TL;DR: This paper proposes the first certificateless public verification scheme against procrastinating auditors (CPVPA) by using blockchain technology, and presents rigorous security proofs to demonstrate the security of CPVPA, and conducts a comprehensive performance evaluation to show that CPVpa is efficient.
288
References
The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing
Peter Mell,Timothy Grance +1 more
- 28 Sep 2011
TL;DR: This cloud model promotes availability and is composed of five essential characteristics, three service models, and four deployment models.
17.6K
A view of cloud computing
Michael Armbrust,Armando Fox,Rean Griffith,Anthony D. Joseph,Randy H. Katz,Andy Konwinski,Gunho Lee,David A. Patterson,Ariel Rabkin,Ion Stoica,Matei Zaharia +10 more
TL;DR: The clouds are clearing the clouds away from the true potential and obstacles posed by this computing capability.
10.4K
Public-key cryptosystems based on composite degree residuosity classes
Pascal Paillier
- 02 May 1999
TL;DR: A new trapdoor mechanism is proposed and three encryption schemes are derived : a trapdoor permutation and two homomorphic probabilistic encryption schemes computationally comparable to RSA, which are provably secure under appropriate assumptions in the standard model.
•Journal Article
Above the Clouds: A Berkeley View of Cloud Computing
Michael Armbrust,Armando Fox,Rean Griffith,Anthony D. Joseph,Randy H. Katz,Andy Konwinski,Gunho Lee,David A. Patterson,Ariel Rabkin,Ion Stoica,Matei Zaharia +10 more
TL;DR: This work focuses on SaaS Providers (Cloud Users) and Cloud Providers, which have received less attention than SAAS Users, and uses the term Private Cloud to refer to internal datacenters of a business or other organization, not made available to the general public.