Publication | Closed Access
Design space exploration and optimization of path oblivious RAM in secure processors
118
Citations
24
References
2013
Year
Unknown Venue
Cryptographic PrimitiveEngineeringInformation SecurityComputer ArchitectureConfidential ComputingSecure ProcessorsHardware SecuritySecure ComputingHardware Security SolutionAddress LeakageDesign Space ExplorationComputer EngineeringData PrivacyLightweight CryptographyCloud Computing SecurityComputer SciencePath Oblivious RamData SecurityCryptographyEncrypted StorageCloud ComputingCloud Cryptography
Keeping user data private is a huge problem both in cloud computing and computation outsourcing. One paradigm to achieve data privacy is to use tamper-resistant processors, inside which users' private data is decrypted and computed upon. These processors need to interact with untrusted external memory. Even if we encrypt all data that leaves the trusted processor, however, the address sequence that goes off-chip may still leak information. To prevent this address leakage, the security community has proposed ORAM (Oblivious RAM). ORAM has mainly been explored in server/file settings which assume a vastly different computation model than secure processors. Not surprisingly, naïvely applying ORAM to a secure processor setting incurs large performance overheads.
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