Secure Key-Updating for Lazy Revocation

Michael Backes, Christian Cachin, and Alina Oprea.
in Proceedings of 11th European Symposium on Research in Computer Security(ESORICS), Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol. 4189, Springer, pp. 327-346, September 2006. Preprint on IACR ePrint 2005/334.

Abstract

We consider the problem of efficient key management and user revocation in cryptographic file systems that allow shared access to files. A performance-efficient solution to user revocation in such systems is lazy revocation, a method that delays the re-encryption of a file until the next write to that file. We formalize the notion of key-updating schemes for lazy revocation, an abstraction to manage cryptographic keys in file systems with lazy revocation, and give a security definition for such schemes. We give two composition methods that combine two secure key-updating schemes into a new secure scheme that permits a larger number of user revocations. We prove the security of two slightly modified existing constructions and propose a novel binary tree construction that is also provable secure in our model. Finally, we give a systematic analysis of the computational and communication complexity of the three constructions and show that the novel construction improves the previously known constructions.

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