3,896 research outputs found
THRIVE: Threshold Homomorphic encryption based secure and privacy preserving bIometric VErification system
In this paper, we propose a new biometric verification and template
protection system which we call the THRIVE system. The system includes novel
enrollment and authentication protocols based on threshold homomorphic
cryptosystem where the private key is shared between a user and the verifier.
In the THRIVE system, only encrypted binary biometric templates are stored in
the database and verification is performed via homomorphically randomized
templates, thus, original templates are never revealed during the
authentication stage. The THRIVE system is designed for the malicious model
where the cheating party may arbitrarily deviate from the protocol
specification. Since threshold homomorphic encryption scheme is used, a
malicious database owner cannot perform decryption on encrypted templates of
the users in the database. Therefore, security of the THRIVE system is enhanced
using a two-factor authentication scheme involving the user's private key and
the biometric data. We prove security and privacy preservation capability of
the proposed system in the simulation-based model with no assumption. The
proposed system is suitable for applications where the user does not want to
reveal her biometrics to the verifier in plain form but she needs to proof her
physical presence by using biometrics. The system can be used with any
biometric modality and biometric feature extraction scheme whose output
templates can be binarized. The overall connection time for the proposed THRIVE
system is estimated to be 336 ms on average for 256-bit biohash vectors on a
desktop PC running with quad-core 3.2 GHz CPUs at 10 Mbit/s up/down link
connection speed. Consequently, the proposed system can be efficiently used in
real life applications
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Privacy-Preserving iVector-Based Speaker Verification
This paper introduces an efficient algorithm to develop a privacy-preserving voice verification based on iVector and linear discriminant analysis techniques. This research considers a scenario in which users enrol their voice biometric to access different services (i.e., banking). Once enrolment is completed, users can verify themselves using their voice print instead of alphanumeric passwords. Since a voice print is unique for everyone, storing it with a third-party server raises several privacy concerns. To address this challenge, this paper proposes a novel technique based on randomization to carry out voice authentication, which allows the user to enrol and verify their voice in the randomized domain. To achieve this, the iVector-based voice verification technique has been redesigned to work on the randomized domain. The proposed algorithm is validated using a well-known speech dataset. The proposed algorithm neither compromises the authentication accuracy nor adds additional complexity due to the randomization operations
Anonymous subject identification and privacy information management in video surveillance
The widespread deployment of surveillance cameras has raised serious privacy concerns, and many privacy-enhancing schemes have been recently proposed to automatically redact images of selected individuals in the surveillance video for protection. Of equal importance are the privacy and efficiency of techniques to first, identify those individuals for privacy protection and second, provide access to original surveillance video contents for security analysis. In this paper, we propose an anonymous subject identification and privacy data management system to be used in privacy-aware video surveillance. The anonymous subject identification system uses iris patterns to identify individuals for privacy protection. Anonymity of the iris-matching process is guaranteed through the use of a garbled-circuit (GC)-based iris matching protocol. A novel GC complexity reduction scheme is proposed by simplifying the iris masking process in the protocol. A user-centric privacy information management system is also proposed that allows subjects to anonymously access their privacy information via their iris patterns. The system is composed of two encrypted-domain protocols: The privacy information encryption protocol encrypts the original video records using the iris pattern acquired during the subject identification phase; the privacy information retrieval protocol allows the video records to be anonymously retrieved through a GC-based iris pattern matching process. Experimental results on a public iris biometric database demonstrate the validity of our framework
Secure Pick Up: Implicit Authentication When You Start Using the Smartphone
We propose Secure Pick Up (SPU), a convenient, lightweight, in-device,
non-intrusive and automatic-learning system for smartphone user authentication.
Operating in the background, our system implicitly observes users' phone
pick-up movements, the way they bend their arms when they pick up a smartphone
to interact with the device, to authenticate the users.
Our SPU outperforms the state-of-the-art implicit authentication mechanisms
in three main aspects: 1) SPU automatically learns the user's behavioral
pattern without requiring a large amount of training data (especially those of
other users) as previous methods did, making it more deployable. Towards this
end, we propose a weighted multi-dimensional Dynamic Time Warping (DTW)
algorithm to effectively quantify similarities between users' pick-up
movements; 2) SPU does not rely on a remote server for providing further
computational power, making SPU efficient and usable even without network
access; and 3) our system can adaptively update a user's authentication model
to accommodate user's behavioral drift over time with negligible overhead.
Through extensive experiments on real world datasets, we demonstrate that SPU
can achieve authentication accuracy up to 96.3% with a very low latency of 2.4
milliseconds. It reduces the number of times a user has to do explicit
authentication by 32.9%, while effectively defending against various attacks.Comment: Published on ACM Symposium on Access Control Models and Technologies
(SACMAT) 201
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