6 research outputs found

    Security and Privacy in Online Social Networks

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    The explosive growth of Online Social Networks (OSNs) over the past few years has redefined the way people interact with existing friends and especially make new friends. OSNs have also become a great new marketplace for trade among the users. However, the associated privacy risks make users vulnerable to severe privacy threats. In this dissertation, we design protocols for private distributed social proximity matching and a private distributed auction based marketplace framework for OSNs. In particular, an OSN user looks for matching profile attributes when trying to broaden his/her social circle. However, revealing private attributes is a potential privacy threat. Distributed private profile matching in OSNs mainly involves using cryptographic tools to compute profile attributes matching privately such that no participating user knows more than the common profile attributes. In this work, we define a new asymmetric distributed social proximity measure between two users in an OSN by taking into account the weighted profile attributes (communities) of the users and that of their friends’. For users with different privacy requirements, we design three private proximity matching protocols with increasing privacy levels. Our protocol with highest privacy level ensures that each user’s proximity threshold is satisfied before revealing any matching information. The use of e-commerce has exploded in the last decade along with the associated security and privacy risks. Frequent security breaches in the e-commerce service providers’ centralized servers compromise consumers’ sensitive private and financial information. Besides, a consumer’s purchase history stored in those servers can be used to reconstruct the consumer’s profile and for a variety of other privacy intrusive purposes like directed marketing. To this end, we propose a secure and private distributed auction framework called SPA, based on decentralized online social networks (DOSNs) for the first time in the literature. The participants in SPA require no trust among each other, trade anonymously, and the security and privacy of the auction is guaranteed. The efficiency, in terms of communication and computation, of proposed private auction protocol is at least an order of magnitude better than existing distributed private auction protocols and is suitable for marketplace with large number of participants

    LiPISC: A Lightweight and Flexible Method for Privacy-Aware Intersection Set Computation

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    Privacy-aware intersection set computation (PISC) can be modeled as secure multi-party computation. The basic idea is to compute the intersection of input sets without leaking privacy. Furthermore, PISC should be sufficiently flexible to recommend approximate intersection items. In this paper, we reveal two previously unpublished attacks against PISC, which can be used to reveal and link one input set to another input set, resulting in privacy leakage. We coin these as Set Linkage Attack and Set Reveal Attack. We then present a lightweight and flexible PISC scheme (LiPISC) and prove its security (including against Set Linkage Attack and Set Reveal Attack)

    Social Closeness Based Private Coordinating Conventions for Online Informal Organizations

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    The hazardous development of Online Interpersonal organizations in the course of recent years has re-imagined the way individuals collaborate with existing companions and particularly make new companions. A few works propose to give individuals a chance to wind up companions on the off chance that they have comparative profile attributes. In any case, profile coordinating includes a natural protection danger of uncovering private profile data to outsiders in the internet. The current answers for the issue endeavor to ensure clients' protection by secretly figuring the convergence or crossing point cardinality of the profile quality arrangements of two clients. These plans have a few impediments can in any case uncover clients' protection. In this project, we influence group structures to reclassify the Online Social Networks(OSN) display and propose a practical awry social closeness measure between two clients. At that point, in light of the proposed hilter kilter social nearness, along with AES algorithm we outline three private coordinating conventions, which give diverse security levels and can ensure clients' protection superior to the past works. At long last, we approve our proposed unbalanced closeness measure utilizing genuine interpersonal organization information and lead broad reenactments to assess the execution of the proposed conventions regarding calculation cost, correspondence cost, add up to running time, and vitality utilization

    Security and Privacy in Mobile Computing: Challenges and Solutions

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    abstract: Mobile devices are penetrating everyday life. According to a recent Cisco report [10], the number of mobile connected devices such as smartphones, tablets, laptops, eReaders, and Machine-to-Machine (M2M) modules will hit 11.6 billion by 2021, exceeding the world's projected population at that time (7.8 billion). The rapid development of mobile devices has brought a number of emerging security and privacy issues in mobile computing. This dissertation aims to address a number of challenging security and privacy issues in mobile computing. This dissertation makes fivefold contributions. The first and second parts study the security and privacy issues in Device-to-Device communications. Specifically, the first part develops a novel scheme to enable a new way of trust relationship called spatiotemporal matching in a privacy-preserving and efficient fashion. To enhance the secure communication among mobile users, the second part proposes a game-theoretical framework to stimulate the cooperative shared secret key generation among mobile users. The third and fourth parts investigate the security and privacy issues in mobile crowdsourcing. In particular, the third part presents a secure and privacy-preserving mobile crowdsourcing system which strikes a good balance among object security, user privacy, and system efficiency. The fourth part demonstrates a differentially private distributed stream monitoring system via mobile crowdsourcing. Finally, the fifth part proposes VISIBLE, a novel video-assisted keystroke inference framework that allows an attacker to infer a tablet user's typed inputs on the touchscreen by recording and analyzing the video of the tablet backside during the user's input process. Besides, some potential countermeasures to this attack are also discussed. This dissertation sheds the light on the state-of-the-art security and privacy issues in mobile computing.Dissertation/ThesisDoctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 201

    ASYMMETRIC SOCIAL PROXIMITY BASED PRIVATE MATCHING PROTOCOLS FOR ONLINE SOCIAL NETWORKS

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    Asymmetric Social Proximity Based Private Matching Protocols for Online Social Networks

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