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Quantitative evaluation of unlinkable ID matching schemes
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Source Workshop On Privacy In The Electronic Society archive
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM workshop on Privacy in the electronic society table of contents
Alexandria, VA, USA
SESSION: Privacy issues in practice table of contents
Pages: 55 - 60  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN:1-59593-228-3
Authors
Yasunobu Nohara  Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
Sozo Inoue  Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
Kensuke Baba  Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
Hiroto Yasuura  Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan
Sponsors
SIGSAC: ACM Special Interest Group on Security, Audit, and Control
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 4,   Downloads (12 Months): 46,   Citation Count: 2
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ABSTRACT

As pervasive computing environments become popular, RFID devices, such as contactless smart cards and RFID tags, are introduced into our daily life. However, there exists a privacy problem that a third party can trace user's behavior by linking device's ID.The concept of unlinkability, that a third party cannot recognize whether some outputs are from the same user, is important to solve the privacy problem. A scheme using hash function satisfies unlinkability against a third party by changing the outputs of RFID devices every time. However, the schemes are not scalable since the server needs O(N) hash calculations for every ID matching, where N is the number of RFID devices.In this paper, we propose the K-steps ID matching scheme, which can reduce the number of the hash calculations on the server to O(log N). Secondly, we propose a quantification of unlinkability using conditional entropy and mutual information. Finally, we analyze the K-steps ID matching scheme using the proposed quantification, and show the relation between the time complexity and unlinkability.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
Stephan A. Weis, Sanjay E. Sarma, Ronald L. Rivest, and Daniel W. Engels, "Security and Privacy Aspects of Low-Cost Radio Frequency Identification Systems", International Conference on Security in Pervasive Computing 2003, LNCS 2802, pp.201--212, 2004.
 
2
Miyako Ohkubo, Koutarou Suzuki and Shingo Kinoshita, "Cryptographic Approach to a Privacy Friendly Tag", RFID Privacy Workshop@MIT, 2003.
 
3
Miyako Ohkubo, Koutarou Suzuki, Shingo Kinoshita, "Hash-Chain Based Forward-Secure Privacy Protection Scheme for Low-Cost RFID", Proc. of the 2004 Symposium on Cryptography and Information Security(SCIS2004), Vol.1, pp.719--724, Jan. 2004.
 
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Claudia Díaz, Stefaan Seys, Joris Claessens, and Bart Preneel, "Towards measuring anonymity", Workshop on Privacy Enhancing Technologies 2002, LNCS 2482, pp. 54--68, 2002.
 
7
Andrei Serjantov and George Danezis, "Towards an Information Theoretic Metric for Anonymity", Workshop on Privacy Enhancing Technologies 2002, LNCS 2482, pp. 41--53, 2002.
 
8
Claudia Díaz, Joris Claessens, Stefaan Seys, and Bart Preneel, "Information Theory and Anonymity", Proceedings of the 23rd Symposium on Information Theory, pp. 179--186, May. 2002.
 
9
Sandra Steinbrecher and Stefan Köpsell, "Modelling unlinkability", Workshop on Privacy Enhancing Technologies 2003, LNCS2760, pp. 32--47, 2003.
 
10
Yasunobu Nohara, Sozo Inoue, Kensuke Baba, and Hiroto Yasuura, "Unlinkable ID Matching Protocol for Large-scale RFID Systems", Proc. of the 2005 Symposium on Cryptography and Information Security (SCIS2005), Vol.3, pp.1567--1572, Jan. 2005. (in Japanese)
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Collaborative Colleagues:
Yasunobu Nohara: colleagues
Sozo Inoue: colleagues
Kensuke Baba: colleagues
Hiroto Yasuura: colleagues