|
Main
Page
Graduate
Program
Undergraduate
Program
Course Information
Course
Catalog
Course
Web Pages
Our
Research
Research Areas
Research
Projects
Publications
Faculty
Graduate
Students
Research
and Technical Staff
Administrative
Staff
Alumni
Calendars
Computing Facilities
Yale
Computer Science FAQ
Yale Workstation Support
Computing
Lab
AfterCollege
Job Resource
Contact
Us
History
Life in the Department
Life About Town
Directions
Faculty
Positions
City
of New Haven
Yale Applied Mathematics
Yale Faculty of Engineering
Yale
University Home Page
Google Search
Yale Info Phonebook
Internal |
|
Security & Cryptography
Securing the Internet presents great challenges and research opportunities.
Potential applications such as Internet voting, universally available
medical records, and ubiquitous e-commerce are all being hindered because
of serious security and privacy concerns. The epidemic of hacker attacks
on personal computers and web sites only highlights the inherent vulnerability
of the current computer and network infrastructure.
Adequately addressing security and privacy concerns requires a combination
of technical, social, and legal approaches. Topics currently under active
investigation in the department include mathematical modeling of security
properties, implementation and application of cryptographic protocols,
secure and privacy-preserving distributed algorithms, trust management,
verification of security properties, and proof-carrying code. There is
also interest in the legal aspects of security, privacy, and intellectual
property, both within the department and in the world-famous Yale Law
school, with which we cooperate. Some of these topics are described in
greater detail below.
James Aspnes
is interested in problems involved with securing large distributed algorithms
against disruption by untrustworthy participants. Using cryptographic
techniques, it may be possible to allow intermediate results in a distributed
algorithm to be certified independently of who provides them, reducing
the problem of choosing which machines to trust. These issues become especially
important in systems, such as peer-to-peer networks, where association
with the system is voluntary and cannot be limited only to machines under
the control of the algorithm designer.
Robert Dunne is
interested in computer security primarily in the context of its implications
on legal analysis of situations involving privacy of personal information,
whether stored or in transit. It is unclear, for example, what level of
security is sufficient to establish, in legal terms, a subjective expectation
of privacy such that a court would be willing to recognize that expectation
as objectively reasonable as well. Encryption can serve a similar purpose,
but his interest is in its broader applications as a tool to establish
the legal legitimacy of certain forms of intellectual property, such as
trade secrets, and, since the passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act, as a new type of "container" for digital intellectual property.
The latter useor perhaps misuseof encryption has enormous
implications for the evolving framework of intellectual property law.
Joan Feigenbaum
is interested in the foundations of electronic commerce and in fundamental
problems in complexity theory that are motivated by cryptology. One such
problem is the power of "instance-hiding" computations. Can
the owner of a private database use the superior processing power of one
or more other machines (perhaps for a fee) without having to reveal the
database to those machines? In a set of influential papers with Martn
Abadi, Don Beaver, Lance Fortnow, and Joe Kilian, Professor Feigenbaum
showed: 1) that instance-hiding computations are limited in power if the
private-database owner can only consult a single other machine; 2) that
they are extremely powerful if the owner can consult multiple other machines,
and 3) that instance hiding is closely related to some of the central
themes of complexity theory, e.g., interactive provability, average vs.
worst-case complexity, and the inherent communication costs of multiparty
protocols.
In another direction, Professor Feigenbaum founded the research area
of "trust management" in collaboration with Matt Blaze and Jack
Lacy. Emerging Internet services that use encryption on a mass-market
scale require sophisticated mechanisms for managing trust. E-businesses
will receive cryptographically signed requests for action and will have
to decide whether or not to grant these requests. In centralized (and
small-scale distributed) computing communities, an authorizer can make
such a decision based on the identity of the person who signed the request.
Global, internet-scale e-businesses, however, cannot rely on identities.
Most merchants will have had no contact with a typical prospective customer
prior to the first time they receive a request from him. Making authorization
decisions in this type of environment requires formal techniques for specifying
security policies and security credentials, rigorously determining whether
a particular set of credentials proves that a request complies with a
policy, and deferring trust to third-party credential issuers. The "PolicyMaker"
and "KeyNote" trust-management systems, which she co-invented
with Blaze, Lacy, John Ioannidis, and Angelos Keromytis, have had wide-ranging
impact on large-scale distributed-authorization mechanisms.
Michael Fischer
is interested in security problems connected with Internet voting, and
more generally in trust and security in multiparty computations. He has
been developing an artificial society in which trust has a precise algorithmic
meaning. In this setting, trust can be learned and used for decision making.
Better decisions lead to greater social success. This framework allows
for the development and analysis of some very simple algorithms for learning
and utilizing trust that are easily implementable in a variety of settings
and are arguably similar to what people commonly use in everyday life.
René Peralta
is interested in the algorithmic aspects of cryptology, security, and
electronic commerce, particularly in the application of theory to practical
Internet applications. The underlying algorithms and protocols must be
sound, but satisfying constraints such as response time, memory and bandwidth
availability, etc. is often at odds with the goal of ensuring security.
To find the proper balance, one must address the concrete, as opposed
to asymptotic, complexity of problems and algorithms. An illustrative
problem of interest is how to hold secure and fair elections over the
Internet, where many practical and social constraints blend with the basic
protocols for casting and counting votes.
Carsten Schürmann
is working on tools that support the design of complex systems, such as
safe communication and authentication protocols, and that enable developers
to experiment with and reason about their specifications. Once verified,
those specifications can be translated into program code, such as secure
client/server models or verified protocol stacks. These tools build on
departmental research in the area of formal methods by drawing on expertise
in type theory, semantic modeling, verification, and automated theorem
proving. By design, his techniques lead to reliable, maintainable and
verifiable implementations, which are difficult to achieve otherwise.
Zhong Shao leads
the FLINT group at Yale, which is developing a system for secure mobile
code based on authentication logics, proof-carrying code, and type-based
certifying compilers. Authentication logics are formal logics that allow
one to reason about the properties of systems and protocols that verify
the identity of users and decide whether or not to permit various operations.
Modeling such systems provides the usual benefits of formal analysis:
hidden assumptions are made explicit, redundant features are exposed,
and flaws in the system may be found. Proof-carrying code (PCC) allows
a code producer to provide a (compiled) program to a host, along with
a formal proof of safety. The host can specify a safety policy and a set
of axioms for reasoning about safety; the producers proof must be
in terms of those axioms. Type-based certifying compilers are compilers
that use static type information to help generate provably safe target
code. These technologies fit together naturally and form the foundation
for modern secure mobile-code system.
Affiliated Faculty: James
Aspnes, Bob Dunne,
Joan Feigenbaum,
Mike Fischer, René
Peralta, Carsten
Schürmann, Zhong
Shao.

|
 |