TY - GEN
T1 - Attribute-based key exchange with general policies
AU - Kolesnikov, Vladimir
AU - Krawczyk, Hugo
AU - Lindell, Yehuda
AU - Malozemoff, Alex J.
AU - Rabin, Tal
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2016 ACM.
PY - 2016/10/24
Y1 - 2016/10/24
N2 - Attribute-based methods provide authorization to parties based on whether their set of attributes (e.g., age, organization, etc.) fulfills a policy. In attribute-based encryption (ABE), authorized parties can decrypt, and in attributebased credentials (ABCs), authorized parties can authenticate themselves. In this paper, we combine elements of ABE and ABCs together with garbled circuits to construct attribute-based key exchange (ABKE). Our focus is on an interactive solution involving a client that holds a certificate (issued by an authority) vouching for that client's attributes and a server that holds a policy computable on such a set of attributes. The goal is for the server to establish a shared key with the client but only if the client's certified attributes satisfy the policy. Our solution enjoys strong privacy guarantees for both the client and the server, including attribute privacy and unlinkability of client sessions. Our main contribution is a construction of ABKE for arbitrary circuits with high (concrete) efficiency. Specifically, we support general policies expressible as boolean circuits computed on a set of attributes. Even for policies containing hundreds of thousands of gates the performance cost is dominated by two pairing computations per policy input. Put another way, for a similar cost to prior ABE/ABC solutions, which can only support small formulas efficiently, we can support vastly richer policies. We implemented our solution and report on its performance. For policies with 100,000 gates and 200 inputs over a realistic network, the server and client spend 957 ms and 176 ms on computation, respectively. When using online preprocessing and batch signature verification, this drops to only 243 ms and 97 ms.
AB - Attribute-based methods provide authorization to parties based on whether their set of attributes (e.g., age, organization, etc.) fulfills a policy. In attribute-based encryption (ABE), authorized parties can decrypt, and in attributebased credentials (ABCs), authorized parties can authenticate themselves. In this paper, we combine elements of ABE and ABCs together with garbled circuits to construct attribute-based key exchange (ABKE). Our focus is on an interactive solution involving a client that holds a certificate (issued by an authority) vouching for that client's attributes and a server that holds a policy computable on such a set of attributes. The goal is for the server to establish a shared key with the client but only if the client's certified attributes satisfy the policy. Our solution enjoys strong privacy guarantees for both the client and the server, including attribute privacy and unlinkability of client sessions. Our main contribution is a construction of ABKE for arbitrary circuits with high (concrete) efficiency. Specifically, we support general policies expressible as boolean circuits computed on a set of attributes. Even for policies containing hundreds of thousands of gates the performance cost is dominated by two pairing computations per policy input. Put another way, for a similar cost to prior ABE/ABC solutions, which can only support small formulas efficiently, we can support vastly richer policies. We implemented our solution and report on its performance. For policies with 100,000 gates and 200 inputs over a realistic network, the server and client spend 957 ms and 176 ms on computation, respectively. When using online preprocessing and batch signature verification, this drops to only 243 ms and 97 ms.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84995503667&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/2976749.2978359
DO - 10.1145/2976749.2978359
M3 - منشور من مؤتمر
T3 - Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security
SP - 1451
EP - 1463
BT - CCS 2016 - Proceedings of the 2016 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security
T2 - 23rd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security, CCS 2016
Y2 - 24 October 2016 through 28 October 2016
ER -