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Verifying Privacy−Type Properties in a Modular Way

Myrto Arapinis‚ Vincent Cheval and Stéphanie Delaune

Abstract

Formal methods have proved their usefulness for analysing the security of protocols. In this setting, privacy-type security properties (e.g. vote-privacy, anonymity, unlink ability) that play an important role in many modern applications are formalised using a notion of equivalence.

In this paper, we study the notion of trace equivalence and we show how to establish such an equivalence relation in a modular way. It is well-known that composition works well when the processes do not share secrets. However, there is no result allowing us to compose processes that rely on some shared secrets such as long term keys. We show that composition works even when the processes share secrets provided that they satisfy some reasonable conditions. Our composition result allows us to prove various equivalence-based properties in a modular way, and works in a quite general setting. In particular, we consider arbitrary cryptographic primitives and processes that use non-trivial else branches.

As an example, we consider the ICAO e-passport standard, and we show how the privacy guarantees of the whole application can be derived from the privacy guarantees of its sub-protocols.

Book Title
25th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Symposium‚ CSF 2012‚ Cambridge‚ MA‚ USA‚ June 25−27‚ 2012
Editor
Stephen Chong
Pages
95–109
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society
Year
2012