Archive for December, 2010

Car Immobilizers

Friday, December 24th, 2010

Karsten Nohl is in the news again, this time for demonstrating how bad the proprietary crypto used for car immobilizers is. Here are a few articles:

Karsten presented the technical aspects in a talk at the 8th Embedded Security in Cars conference in Berlin.

Even if car manufacturers get the crypto right, relay attacks pose a serious threat, especially for modern cars that do away with the mechanical key completely. See the upcoming NDSS paper by Aurelien Francillon, Boris Danev, and Srdjan Capkun: Relay Attacks on Passive Keyless Entry and Start Systems in Modern Cars.

Secure Biometrics

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

We’ve released our code and paper on efficient privacy-preserving biometric identification:

Yan Huang (University of Virginia), Lior Malka (Intel/University of Maryland), David Evans (University of Virginia), and Jonathan Katz (University of Maryland). Efficient Privacy-Preserving Biometric Identification. To appear in 18th Network and Distributed System Security Conference (NDSS 2011), 6-9 February 2011. [PDF, 14 pages]

We present an efficient matching protocol that can be used in many privacy-preserving biometric identification systems in the semi-honest setting. Our most general technical contribution is a new backtracking protocol that uses the by-product of evaluating a garbled circuit to enable efficient oblivious information retrieval. We also present a more efficient protocol for computing the Euclidean distances of vectors, and optimized circuits for finding the closest match between a point held by one party and a set of points held by another. We evaluate our protocols by implementing a practical privacy-preserving fingerprint matching system.

Yan will present the paper at NDSS in February. The code for our system is available under the MIT open source license.


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