Raphael R. Toledo

2papers

2 Papers

CRSep 4, 2017
Mix-ORAM: Using delegate shuffles

Raphael R. Toledo, George Danezis, Isao Echizen

Oblivious RAM (ORAM) is a key technology for providing private storage and querying on untrusted machines but is commonly seen as impractical due to the high overhead of the re-randomization, called the eviction, the client incurs. We propose in this work to securely delegate the eviction to semi-trusted third parties to enable any client to accede the ORAM technology and present four different designs inspired by mix-net technologies with reasonable periodic costs.

IRApr 1, 2016
Lower-Cost epsilon-Private Information Retrieval

Raphael R. Toledo, George Danezis, Ian Goldberg

Private Information Retrieval (PIR), despite being well studied, is computationally costly and arduous to scale. We explore lower-cost relaxations of information-theoretic PIR, based on dummy queries, sparse vectors, and compositions with an anonymity system. We prove the security of each scheme using a flexible differentially private definition for private queries that can capture notions of imperfect privacy. We show that basic schemes are weak, but some of them can be made arbitrarily safe by composing them with large anonymity systems.