TY - GEN
T1 - Identity-based trace and revoke schemes
AU - Phan, Duong Hieu
AU - Trinh, Viet Cuong
PY - 2011/9/29
Y1 - 2011/9/29
N2 - Trace and revoke systems allow for the secure distribution of digital content in such a way that malicious users, who collude to produce pirate decoders, can be traced back and revoked from the system. In this paper, we consider such schemes in the identity-based setting, by extending the model of identity-based traitor tracing scheme by Abdalla et al. to support revocation. The proposed constructions rely on the subset cover framework. We first propose a generic construction which transforms an identity-based encryption with wildcard (WIBE) of depth log(N) (N being the number of users) into an identity-based trace and revoke scheme by relying on the complete subtree framework (of depth log(N)). This leads, however, to a scheme with log(N) private key size (as in a complete subtree scheme). We improve this scheme by introducing generalized WIBE (GWIBE) and propose a second construction based on GWIBE of two levels. The latter scheme provides the nice feature of having constant private key size (3 group elements). In our schemes, we also deal with advanced attacks in the subset cover framework, namely pirate evolution attacks (PEvoA) and pirates 2.0. The only known strategy to protect schemes in the subset cover framework against pirate evolution attacks was proposed by Jin and Lotspiech but decreases seriously the efficiency of the original schemes: each subset is expanded to many others subsets; the total number of subsets to be used in the encryption could thus be O(N 1/b ) to prevent a traitor from creating more than b generations. Our GWIBE based scheme, resisting PEvoA better than the Jin and Lotspiech's method. Moreover, our method does not need to change the partitioning procedure in the original complete subtree scheme and therefore, the resulted schemes are very competitive compared to the original scheme, with r log(N/r) logN -size ciphertext and constant size private key.
AB - Trace and revoke systems allow for the secure distribution of digital content in such a way that malicious users, who collude to produce pirate decoders, can be traced back and revoked from the system. In this paper, we consider such schemes in the identity-based setting, by extending the model of identity-based traitor tracing scheme by Abdalla et al. to support revocation. The proposed constructions rely on the subset cover framework. We first propose a generic construction which transforms an identity-based encryption with wildcard (WIBE) of depth log(N) (N being the number of users) into an identity-based trace and revoke scheme by relying on the complete subtree framework (of depth log(N)). This leads, however, to a scheme with log(N) private key size (as in a complete subtree scheme). We improve this scheme by introducing generalized WIBE (GWIBE) and propose a second construction based on GWIBE of two levels. The latter scheme provides the nice feature of having constant private key size (3 group elements). In our schemes, we also deal with advanced attacks in the subset cover framework, namely pirate evolution attacks (PEvoA) and pirates 2.0. The only known strategy to protect schemes in the subset cover framework against pirate evolution attacks was proposed by Jin and Lotspiech but decreases seriously the efficiency of the original schemes: each subset is expanded to many others subsets; the total number of subsets to be used in the encryption could thus be O(N 1/b ) to prevent a traitor from creating more than b generations. Our GWIBE based scheme, resisting PEvoA better than the Jin and Lotspiech's method. Moreover, our method does not need to change the partitioning procedure in the original complete subtree scheme and therefore, the resulted schemes are very competitive compared to the original scheme, with r log(N/r) logN -size ciphertext and constant size private key.
KW - Broadcast Encryption
KW - Pirate Evolution Attacks
KW - Pirates 2.0
KW - Subset-cover Framework
KW - Traitor Tracing
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-642-24316-5_15
DO - 10.1007/978-3-642-24316-5_15
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:80053165607
SN - 9783642243158
T3 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)
SP - 204
EP - 221
BT - Provable Security - 5th International Conference, ProvSec 2011, Proceedings
T2 - 5th International Conference on Provable Security, ProvSec 2011
Y2 - 16 October 2011 through 18 October 2011
ER -