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Tests for Establishing Security Properties

Vincent Cheval‚ Stéphanie Delaune and Mark Ryan

Abstract

Ensuring strong security properties in some cases requires participants to carry out tests during the execution of a protocol. A classical example is electronic voting: participants are required to verify the presence of their ballots on a bulletin board, and to verify the computation of the election outcome. The notion of certificate transparency is another example, in which participants in the protocol are required to perform tests to verify the integrity of a certificate log.

We present a framework for modelling systems with such `testable properties', using the applied pi calculus. We model the tests that are made by participants in order to obtain the security properties. Underlying our work is an attacker model called ``malicious but cautious'', which lies in between the Dolev-Yao model and the ``honest but curious'' model. The malicious-but-cautious model is appropriate for cloud computing providers that are potentially malicious but are assumed to be cautious about launching attacks that might cause user tests to fail.

Book Title
Trustworthy Global Computing − 9th International Symposium‚ TGC 2014‚ Rome‚ Italy‚ September 5−6‚ 2014. Revised Selected Papers
Editor
Matteo Maffei and Emilio Tuosto
Pages
82–96
Publisher
Springer
Series
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Volume
8902
Year
2014