1,173 research outputs found
Lime: Data Lineage in the Malicious Environment
Intentional or unintentional leakage of confidential data is undoubtedly one
of the most severe security threats that organizations face in the digital era.
The threat now extends to our personal lives: a plethora of personal
information is available to social networks and smartphone providers and is
indirectly transferred to untrustworthy third party and fourth party
applications.
In this work, we present a generic data lineage framework LIME for data flow
across multiple entities that take two characteristic, principal roles (i.e.,
owner and consumer). We define the exact security guarantees required by such a
data lineage mechanism toward identification of a guilty entity, and identify
the simplifying non repudiation and honesty assumptions. We then develop and
analyze a novel accountable data transfer protocol between two entities within
a malicious environment by building upon oblivious transfer, robust
watermarking, and signature primitives. Finally, we perform an experimental
evaluation to demonstrate the practicality of our protocol
On the Security of the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast Protocol
Automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) is the communications
protocol currently being rolled out as part of next generation air
transportation systems. As the heart of modern air traffic control, it will
play an essential role in the protection of two billion passengers per year,
besides being crucial to many other interest groups in aviation. The inherent
lack of security measures in the ADS-B protocol has long been a topic in both
the aviation circles and in the academic community. Due to recently published
proof-of-concept attacks, the topic is becoming ever more pressing, especially
with the deadline for mandatory implementation in most airspaces fast
approaching.
This survey first summarizes the attacks and problems that have been reported
in relation to ADS-B security. Thereafter, it surveys both the theoretical and
practical efforts which have been previously conducted concerning these issues,
including possible countermeasures. In addition, the survey seeks to go beyond
the current state of the art and gives a detailed assessment of security
measures which have been developed more generally for related wireless networks
such as sensor networks and vehicular ad hoc networks, including a taxonomy of
all considered approaches.Comment: Survey, 22 Pages, 21 Figure
Adaptive Traffic Fingerprinting for Darknet Threat Intelligence
Darknet technology such as Tor has been used by various threat actors for
organising illegal activities and data exfiltration. As such, there is a case
for organisations to block such traffic, or to try and identify when it is used
and for what purposes. However, anonymity in cyberspace has always been a
domain of conflicting interests. While it gives enough power to nefarious
actors to masquerade their illegal activities, it is also the cornerstone to
facilitate freedom of speech and privacy. We present a proof of concept for a
novel algorithm that could form the fundamental pillar of a darknet-capable
Cyber Threat Intelligence platform. The solution can reduce anonymity of users
of Tor, and considers the existing visibility of network traffic before
optionally initiating targeted or widespread BGP interception. In combination
with server HTTP response manipulation, the algorithm attempts to reduce the
candidate data set to eliminate client-side traffic that is most unlikely to be
responsible for server-side connections of interest. Our test results show that
MITM manipulated server responses lead to expected changes received by the Tor
client. Using simulation data generated by shadow, we show that the detection
scheme is effective with false positive rate of 0.001, while sensitivity
detecting non-targets was 0.016+-0.127. Our algorithm could assist
collaborating organisations willing to share their threat intelligence or
cooperate during investigations.Comment: 26 page
TTP-free Asymmetric Fingerprinting based on Client Side Embedding
In this paper, we propose a solution for implementing an asymmetric fingerprinting protocol within a client-side embedding distribution framework. The scheme is based on two novel client-side embedding techniques that are able to reliably transmit a binary fingerprint. The first one relies on standard spread-spectrum like client-side embedding, while the second one is based on an innovative client-side informed embedding technique. The proposed techniques enable secure distribution of personalized decryption keys containing the Buyer's fingerprint by means of existing asymmetric protocols, without using a trusted third party. Simulation results show that the fingerprint can be reliably recovered by using either non-blind decoding with standard embedding or blind decoding with informed embedding, and in both cases it is robust with respect to common attacks. To the best of our knowledge, the proposed scheme is the first solution addressing asymmetric fingerprinting within a clientside framework, representing a valid solution to both customer's rights and scalability issues in multimedia content distributio
Framework for privacy-aware content distribution in peer-to- peer networks with copyright protection
The use of peer-to-peer (P2P) networks for multimedia distribution has spread out globally in recent years. This mass popularity is primarily driven by the efficient distribution of content, also giving rise to piracy and copyright infringement as well as privacy concerns. An end user (buyer) of a P2P content distribution system does not want to reveal his/her identity during a transaction with a content owner (merchant), whereas the merchant does not want the buyer to further redistribute the content illegally. Therefore, there is a strong need for content distribution mechanisms over P2P networks that do not pose security and privacy threats to copyright holders and end users, respectively. However, the current systems being developed to provide copyright and privacy protection to merchants and end users employ cryptographic mechanisms, which incur high computational and communication costs, making these systems impractical for the distribution of big files, such as music albums or movies.El uso de soluciones de igual a igual (peer-to-peer, P2P) para la distribución multimedia se ha extendido mundialmente en los últimos años. La amplia popularidad de este paradigma se debe, principalmente, a la distribución eficiente de los contenidos, pero también da lugar a la piraterÃa, a la violación del copyright y a problemas de privacidad. Un usuario final (comprador) de un sistema de distribución de contenidos P2P no quiere revelar su identidad durante una transacción con un propietario de contenidos (comerciante), mientras que el comerciante no quiere que el comprador pueda redistribuir ilegalmente el contenido más adelante. Por lo tanto, existe una fuerte necesidad de mecanismos de distribución de contenidos por medio de redes P2P que no supongan un riesgo de seguridad y privacidad a los titulares de derechos y los usuarios finales, respectivamente. Sin embargo, los sistemas actuales que se desarrollan con el propósito de proteger el copyright y la privacidad de los comerciantes y los usuarios finales emplean mecanismos de cifrado que implican unas cargas computacionales y de comunicaciones muy elevadas que convierten a estos sistemas en poco prácticos para distribuir archivos de gran tamaño, tales como álbumes de música o pelÃculas.L'ús de solucions d'igual a igual (peer-to-peer, P2P) per a la distribució multimèdia s'ha estès mundialment els darrers anys. L'à mplia popularitat d'aquest paradigma es deu, principalment, a la distribució eficient dels continguts, però també dóna lloc a la pirateria, a la violació del copyright i a problemes de privadesa. Un usuari final (comprador) d'un sistema de distribució de continguts P2P no vol revelar la seva identitat durant una transacció amb un propietari de continguts (comerciant), mentre que el comerciant no vol que el comprador pugui redistribuir il·legalment el contingut més endavant. Per tant, hi ha una gran necessitat de mecanismes de distribució de continguts per mitjà de xarxes P2P que no comportin un risc de seguretat i privadesa als titulars de drets i els usuaris finals, respectivament. Tanmateix, els sistemes actuals que es desenvolupen amb el propòsit de protegir el copyright i la privadesa dels comerciants i els usuaris finals fan servir mecanismes d'encriptació que impliquen unes cà rregues computacionals i de comunicacions molt elevades que fan aquests sistemes poc prà ctics per a distribuir arxius de grans dimensions, com ara à lbums de música o pel·lÃcules
Dynamic Traitor Tracing Schemes, Revisited
We revisit recent results from the area of collusion-resistant traitor
tracing, and show how they can be combined and improved to obtain more
efficient dynamic traitor tracing schemes. In particular, we show how the
dynamic Tardos scheme of Laarhoven et al. can be combined with the optimized
score functions of Oosterwijk et al. to trace coalitions much faster. If the
attack strategy is known, in many cases the order of the code length goes down
from quadratic to linear in the number of colluders, while if the attack is not
known, we show how the interleaving defense may be used to catch all colluders
about twice as fast as in the dynamic Tardos scheme. Some of these results also
apply to the static traitor tracing setting where the attack strategy is known
in advance, and to group testing.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure (6 subfigures), 1 tabl
Secure Watermarking for Multimedia Content Protection: A Review of its Benefits and Open Issues
Distribution channels such as digital music downloads, video-on-demand, multimedia social networks, pose new challenges to the design of content protection measures aimed at preventing copyright violations. Digital watermarking has been proposed as a possible brick of such protection systems, providing a means to embed a unique code, as a fingerprint, into each copy of the distributed content. However, application of watermarking for multimedia content protection in realistic scenarios poses several security issues. Secure signal processing, by which name we indicate a set of techniques able to process sensitive signals that have been obfuscated either by encryption or by other privacy-preserving primitives, may offer valuable solutions to the aforementioned issues. More specifically, the adoption of efficient methods for watermark embedding or detection on data that have been secured in some way, which we name in short secure watermarking, provides an elegant way to solve the security concerns of fingerprinting applications. The aim of this contribution is to illustrate recent results regarding secure watermarking to the signal processing community, highlighting both benefits and still open issues. Some of the most interesting challenges in this area, as well as new research directions, will also be discussed
Multimedia
The nowadays ubiquitous and effortless digital data capture and processing capabilities offered by the majority of devices, lead to an unprecedented penetration of multimedia content in our everyday life. To make the most of this phenomenon, the rapidly increasing volume and usage of digitised content requires constant re-evaluation and adaptation of multimedia methodologies, in order to meet the relentless change of requirements from both the user and system perspectives. Advances in Multimedia provides readers with an overview of the ever-growing field of multimedia by bringing together various research studies and surveys from different subfields that point out such important aspects. Some of the main topics that this book deals with include: multimedia management in peer-to-peer structures & wireless networks, security characteristics in multimedia, semantic gap bridging for multimedia content and novel multimedia applications
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