CRNIJun 15, 2012

Data Minimisation in Communication Protocols: A Formal Analysis Framework and Application to Identity Management

arXiv:1206.7111v3
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses privacy concerns for users in communication protocols, particularly in identity management, by providing a general formal analysis method, though it is incremental as it builds on existing privacy-enhancing protocols.

The authors tackled the problem of assessing privacy in communication protocols by proposing a formal framework to analyze and compare protocols based on data minimisation principles, and validated it by analyzing four identity management systems.

With the growing amount of personal information exchanged over the Internet, privacy is becoming more and more a concern for users. One of the key principles in protecting privacy is data minimisation. This principle requires that only the minimum amount of information necessary to accomplish a certain goal is collected and processed. "Privacy-enhancing" communication protocols have been proposed to guarantee data minimisation in a wide range of applications. However, currently there is no satisfactory way to assess and compare the privacy they offer in a precise way: existing analyses are either too informal and high-level, or specific for one particular system. In this work, we propose a general formal framework to analyse and compare communication protocols with respect to privacy by data minimisation. Privacy requirements are formalised independent of a particular protocol in terms of the knowledge of (coalitions of) actors in a three-layer model of personal information. These requirements are then verified automatically for particular protocols by computing this knowledge from a description of their communication. We validate our framework in an identity management (IdM) case study. As IdM systems are used more and more to satisfy the increasing need for reliable on-line identification and authentication, privacy is becoming an increasingly critical issue. We use our framework to analyse and compare four identity management systems. Finally, we discuss the completeness and (re)usability of the proposed framework.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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