Most of the work in the formal analysis of cryptographic schemes
traditionally concentrated in abstract adversarial models that do
not capture side-channel attacks. Such attacks exploit various
forms of unintended information leakage, which is inherent to
almost all physical implementations. In light of the prevalence of
such attacks there are several attempts to model them and suggest
schemes that are resistant to some of these attacks.
I will describe recent developments in the area, especially those inspired by the
``cold boot attacks" of Halderman et al (Usenix Security 2008) and the
model suggested by Akavia, Goldwasser and Vaikuntanathan (TCC 2009) in which adversarially chosen functions of the secret key are leaked to the
attacker. In particular I will show a new simple construction of a public-key
cryptosystem resistant to leakage of almost all the key. I will also discuss directions
for future research.
Joint work with Gil Segev
Date and Time
Wednesday March 18, 2009 4:20pm -
5:50pm
Location
Computer Science Small Auditorium (Room 105)
Event Type
Speaker
Moni Naor, from Weizmann Institute, Israel
Host
Sanjeev Arora