scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

PORs: Proofs of Retrievability for Large Files

Ari Juels, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2007 - 
- Vol. 2007, pp 243
TLDR
This paper defines and explores proofs of retrievability (PORs), a POR scheme that enables an archive or back-up service to produce a concise proof that a user can retrieve a target file F, that is, that the archive retains and reliably transmits file data sufficient for the user to recover F in its entirety.
Abstract
In this paper, we define and explore proofs of retrievability (PORs). A POR scheme enables an archive or back-up service (prover) to produce a concise proof that a user (verifier) can retrieve a target file F, that is, that the archive retains and reliably transmits file data sufficient for the user to recover F in its entirety.A POR may be viewed as a kind of cryptographic proof of knowledge (POK), but one specially designed to handle a large file (or bitstring) F. We explore POR protocols here in which the communication costs, number of memory accesses for the prover, and storage requirements of the user (verifier) are small parameters essentially independent of the length of F. In addition to proposing new, practical POR constructions, we explore implementation considerations and optimizations that bear on previously explored, related schemes.In a POR, unlike a POK, neither the prover nor the verifier need actually have knowledge of F. PORs give rise to a new and unusual security definition whose formulation is another contribution of our work.We view PORs as an important tool for semi-trusted online archives. Existing cryptographic techniques help users ensure the privacy and integrity of files they retrieve. It is also natural, however, for users to want to verify that archives do not delete or modify files prior to retrieval. The goal of a POR is to accomplish these checks without users having to download the files themselves. A POR can also provide quality-of-service guarantees, i.e., show that a file is retrievable within a certain time bound.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Review: A survey on security issues in service delivery models of cloud computing

TL;DR: A survey of the different security risks that pose a threat to the cloud is presented and a new model targeting at improving features of an existing model must not risk or threaten other important features of the current model.
Posted Content

Provable Data Possession at Untrusted Stores.

TL;DR: Ateniese et al. as discussed by the authors introduced the provable data possession (PDP) model, which allows a client that has stored data at an untrusted server to verify that the server possesses the original data without retrieving it.
Book ChapterDOI

The knowledge complexity of interactive proof-systems

TL;DR: Permission to copy without fee all or part of this material is granted provided that the copies arc not made or distributed for direct commercial advantage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enabling Public Auditability and Data Dynamics for Storage Security in Cloud Computing

TL;DR: To achieve efficient data dynamics, the existing proof of storage models are improved by manipulating the classic Merkle Hash Tree construction for block tag authentication, and an elegant verification scheme is constructed for the seamless integration of these two salient features in the protocol design.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Privacy-Preserving Public Auditing for Data Storage Security in Cloud Computing

TL;DR: This paper utilize and uniquely combine the public key based homomorphic authenticator with random masking to achieve the privacy-preserving public cloud data auditing system, which meets all above requirements.
References
More filters
Journal Article

Ensuring data storage security in cloud computing with effect of kerberos

TL;DR: This article focuses on cloud data storage security by the implementation of kerberos authentication service, and defines the kerbero for create the ticket and granting ticket for each user.
Journal ArticleDOI

Message-locked proof of ownership and retrievability with remote repairing in cloud

TL;DR: A model of message-locked proof of ownership and retrievability with remote repairing is proposed, which provides data confidentiality, secure cross-user deduplication at the client-side, file retrieevability, ownership privacy-preserving, random block accessing, and remote repairing simultaneously.
Book ChapterDOI

A New Public Remote Integrity Checking Scheme with User Privacy

TL;DR: A new remote integrity checking scheme which allows the cloud server to protect the identity information of the data owner against the TPA, and a formal security model is defined to capture the requirement of user anonymity, and prove the anonymity as well as the soundness of the proposed scheme.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic data auditing scheme for big data storage

TL;DR: This work presents a dynamic auditing scheme meeting the special requirement of Hadoop, designed to support dynamic data operations on HDFS (Hadoop distributed file system), and shows that the proposed scheme is secure enough to resist forge attack, replace attack and replay attack on big data platform.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic Provable Data Possession of Multiple Copies in Cloud Storage Based on Full-Node of AVL Tree

TL;DR: This article describes how to protect the security of cloud storage, a provable data possession scheme based on full-nodes of an AVL tree for multiple data copies in cloud storage.
Related Papers (5)