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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.

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Citations
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The knowledge complexity of interactive proof-systems

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References
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Book ChapterDOI

Secure deduplication with encrypted data for cloud storage

TL;DR: This chapter proposes ClouDedup, a secure and efficient storage service which assures block-level deduplication and data confidentiality at the same time, and proposes to include a new component in order to implement the key management for each block together with the actual dedUplication operation.
Posted Content

Remote Integrity Check with Dishonest Storage Server.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an alternative security model for Remote Integrity Check (RIC), which is not a POR system and can be deployed as a PORE system and also serve as an example of an effective POR scheme whose extraction is not verifiable.

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TL;DR: A survey of different security issues that affects the cloud environment and related work that are carried out in the area of integrity is conducted.
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An efficient and secure data auditing scheme based on fog-to-cloud computing for Internet of things scenarios:

TL;DR: An efficient and secure data auditing scheme based on fog-to-cloud computing for Internet of things scenarios, which can better meet performance and security requirements and is safe and efficient.
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Auditable versioned data storage outsourcing

TL;DR: This paper presents algorithms to achieve full persistence for an optimized skip list (known as FlexList) so that versioned data can be audited, and explores how the proposed data structure benefits the system with block level deduplication besides adding auditability property, and how it can be integrated with a state-of-the-art versioning system (Git), and in the process scale the storage efficiency of Git.
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