Practical Forward-Secure Range and Sort Queries with Update-Oblivious Linked Lists
We revisit the problem of privacy-preserving range search and sort queries on encrypted data in the face of an untrusted data store. Our new protocol RASP has several advantages over existing work. First, RASP strengthens privacy by ensuring : after a query for range [ ], any new record added to the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies 2015-06, Vol.2015 (2), p.81-98 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We revisit the problem of privacy-preserving range search and sort queries on encrypted data in the face of an untrusted data store. Our new protocol RASP has several advantages over existing work. First, RASP strengthens privacy by ensuring
: after a query for range [
], any new record added to the data store is indistinguishable from random, even if the new record falls within range [
]. We are able to accomplish this using only traditional hash and block cipher operations, abstaining from expensive asymmetric cryptography and bilinear pairings. Consequently, RASP is highly practical, even for large database sizes. Additionally, we require only cloud
and not a computational cloud like related works, which can reduce monetary costs significantly. At the heart of RASP, we develop a new
bucket-based data structure. We allow for data to be added to buckets without leaking into which bucket it has been added. As long as a bucket is not explicitly queried, the data store does not learn anything about bucket contents. Furthermore, no information is leaked about data additions following a query. Besides formally proving RASP’s privacy, we also present a practical evaluation of RASP on Amazon Dynamo, demonstrating its efficiency and real world applicability. |
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ISSN: | 2299-0984 2299-0984 |
DOI: | 10.1515/popets-2015-0015 |