Authors
David Cash, Paul Grubbs, Jason Perry, Thomas Ristenpart
Publication date
2015/10/12
Book
Proceedings of the 22nd ACM SIGSAC conference on computer and communications security
Pages
668-679
Description
Schemes for secure outsourcing of client data with search capability are being increasingly marketed and deployed. In the literature, schemes for accomplishing this efficiently are called Searchable Encryption (SE). They achieve high efficiency with provable security by means of a quantifiable leakage profile. However, the degree to which SE leakage can be exploited by an adversary is not well understood.
To address this, we present a characterization of the leakage profiles of in-the-wild searchable encryption products and SE schemes in the literature, and present attack models based on an adversarial server's prior knowledge. Then we empirically investigate the security of searchable encryption by providing query recovery and plaintext recovery attacks that exploit these leakage profiles. We term these leakage-abuse attacks and demonstrate their effectiveness for varying leakage profiles and levels of server …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Cash, P Grubbs, J Perry, T Ristenpart - Proceedings of the 22nd ACM SIGSAC conference on …, 2015