133 research outputs found
Homomorphic Encryption for Speaker Recognition: Protection of Biometric Templates and Vendor Model Parameters
Data privacy is crucial when dealing with biometric data. Accounting for the
latest European data privacy regulation and payment service directive,
biometric template protection is essential for any commercial application.
Ensuring unlinkability across biometric service operators, irreversibility of
leaked encrypted templates, and renewability of e.g., voice models following
the i-vector paradigm, biometric voice-based systems are prepared for the
latest EU data privacy legislation. Employing Paillier cryptosystems, Euclidean
and cosine comparators are known to ensure data privacy demands, without loss
of discrimination nor calibration performance. Bridging gaps from template
protection to speaker recognition, two architectures are proposed for the
two-covariance comparator, serving as a generative model in this study. The
first architecture preserves privacy of biometric data capture subjects. In the
second architecture, model parameters of the comparator are encrypted as well,
such that biometric service providers can supply the same comparison modules
employing different key pairs to multiple biometric service operators. An
experimental proof-of-concept and complexity analysis is carried out on the
data from the 2013-2014 NIST i-vector machine learning challenge
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
Privacy-preserving comparison of variable-length data with application to biometric template protection
The establishment of cloud computing and big data in a wide variety of daily applications has raised some privacy concerns due to the sensitive nature of some of the processed data. This has promoted the need to develop data protection techniques, where the storage and all operations are carried out without disclosing any information. Following this trend, this paper presents a new approach to efficiently compare variable-length data in the encrypted domain using homomorphic encryption where only encrypted data is stored or exchanged. The new variable-length-based algorithm is fused with existing fixed-length techniques in order to obtain increased comparison accuracy. To assess the soundness of the proposed approach, we evaluate its performance on a particular application: a multi-algorithm biometric template protection system based on dynamic signatures that complies with the requirements described in the ISO/IEC 24745 standard on biometric information protection. Experiments have been carried out on a publicly available database and a free implementation of the Paillier cryptosystem to ensure reproducibility and comparability to other schemes.This work was supported in part by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF); in part by the Hessen State Ministry
for Higher Education, Research, and the Arts (HMWK) within the Center for Research in Security and Privacy (CRISP); in part by the
Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad / Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional through the CogniMetrics Project under Grant
TEC2015-70627-R; and in part by Cecaban
Fuzzy Vault scheme based on fixed-length templates applied to dynamic signature verification
As a consequence of the wide deployment of biometrics-based recognition systems, there are increasing concerns about the security of the sensitive information managed. Various techniques have been proposed in the literature for the biometric templates protection (BTP), having gained great popularity the crypto-biometric systems. In the present paper we propose the implementation of a Fuzzy Vault (FV) scheme based on fixed-length templates with application to dynamic signature verification (DSV), where only 15 global features of the signature are considered to form the templates. The performance of the proposed system is evaluated using three databases: a proprietary collection of signatures, and the publicly available databases MCYT and BioSecure. The experimental results show very similar verification performance compared to an equivalent unprotected system.This work was supported by the Spanish National Cybersecurity Institute (INCIBE) through the Excellence of Advanced Cybersecurity Research Teams Program
Hybrid biometric template protection:Resolving the agony of choice between bloom filters and homomorphic encryption
Abstract Bloom filters (BFs) and homomorphic encryption (HE) are prominent techniques used to design biometric template protection (BTP) schemes that aim to protect sensitive biometric information during storage and biometric comparison. However, the pros and cons of BF‐ and HE‐based BTPs are not well studied in literature. We investigate the strengths and weaknesses of these two approaches since both seem promising from a theoretical viewpoint. Our key insight is to extend our theoretical investigation to cover the practical case of iris recognition on the ground that iris (1) benefits from the alignment‐free property of BFs and (2) induces huge computational burdens when implemented in the HE‐encrypted domain. BF‐based BTPs can be implemented to be either fast with high recognition accuracy while missing the important privacy property of ‘unlinkability’, or to be fast with unlinkability‐property while missing the high accuracy. HE‐based BTPs, on the other hand, are highly secure, achieve good accuracy, and meet the unlinkability‐property, but they are much slower than BF‐based approaches. As a synthesis, we propose a hybrid BTP scheme that combines the good properties of BFs and HE, ensuring unlinkability and high recognition accuracy, while being about seven times faster than the traditional HE‐based approach
Protection of privacy in biometric data
Biometrics is commonly used in many automated veri cation systems offering several advantages over traditional veri cation methods. Since biometric features are associated with individuals, their leakage will violate individuals\u27 privacy, which can cause serious and continued problems as the biometric data from a person are irreplaceable. To protect the biometric data containing privacy information, a number of privacy-preserving biometric schemes (PPBSs) have been developed over the last decade, but they have various drawbacks. The aim of this paper is to provide a comprehensive overview of the existing PPBSs and give guidance for future privacy-preserving biometric research. In particular, we explain the functional mechanisms of popular PPBSs and present the state-of-the-art privacy-preserving biometric methods based on these mechanisms. Furthermore, we discuss the drawbacks of the existing PPBSs and point out the challenges and future research directions in PPBSs
State of the Art in Biometric Key Binding and Key Generation Schemes
Direct storage of biometric templates in databases exposes the authentication system and legitimate users to numerous security and privacy challenges. Biometric cryptosystems or template protection schemes are used to overcome the security and privacy challenges associated with the use of biometrics as a means of authentication. This paper presents a review of previous works in biometric key binding and key generation schemes. The review focuses on key binding techniques such as biometric encryption, fuzzy commitment scheme, fuzzy vault and shielding function. Two categories of key generation schemes considered are private template and quantization schemes. The paper also discusses the modes of operations, strengths and weaknesses of various kinds of key-based template protection schemes. The goal is to provide the reader with a clear understanding of the current and emerging trends in key-based biometric cryptosystems
Mejora de la seguridad y la privacidad de los sistemas biométricos
Tesis doctoral inédita leída en la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Escuela Politécnica Superior, Departamento de Tecnología Electrónica y de las Comunicaciones. Fecha de lectura: 02-06-2016This Thesis was printed with the financial support from EPS-UAM and the Biometric Recognition Group-ATVS
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