• DocumentCode
    1259758
  • Title

    Enhancing Data Trustworthiness via Assured Digital Signing

  • Author

    Weiqi Dai ; Parker, T.P. ; Hai Jin ; Shouhuai Xu

  • Author_Institution
    Services Comput. Technol. & Syst. Lab., Huazhong Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Wuhan, China
  • Volume
    9
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2012
  • Firstpage
    838
  • Lastpage
    851
  • Abstract
    Digital signatures are an important mechanism for ensuring data trustworthiness via source authenticity, integrity, and source nonrepudiation. However, their trustworthiness guarantee can be subverted in the real world by sophisticated attacks, which can obtain cryptographically legitimate digital signatures without actually compromising the private signing key. This problem cannot be adequately addressed by a purely cryptographic approach, by the revocation mechanism of Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) because it may take a long time to detect the compromise, or by using tamper-resistant hardware because the attacker does not need to compromise the hardware. This problem will become increasingly more important and evident because of stealthy malware (or Advanced Persistent Threats). In this paper, we propose a novel solution, dubbed Assured Digital Signing (ADS), to enhancing the data trustworthiness vouched by digital signatures. In order to minimize the modifications to the Trusted Computing Base (TCB), ADS simultaneously takes advantage of trusted computing and virtualization technologies. Specifically, ADS allows a signature verifier to examine not only a signature´s cryptographic validity but also its system security validity that the private signing key and the signing function are secure, despite the powerful attack that the signing application program and the general-purpose Operating System (OS) kernel are malicious. The modular design of ADS makes it application-transparent (i.e., no need to modify the application source code in order to deploy it) and almost hypervisor-independent (i.e., it can be implemented with any Type I hypervisor). To demonstrate the feasibility of ADS, we report the implementation and analysis of an Xen-based ADS system.
  • Keywords
    digital signatures; invasive software; operating systems (computers); public key cryptography; ADS; OS kernel; PKI; TCB; advanced persistent threats; assured digital signing; cryptographic validity; cryptography; data trustworthiness; digital signatures; general-purpose operating system; public key infrastructure; signature verifier; source authenticity; source integrity; source nonrepudiation; stealthy malware; tamper-resistant hardware; trusted computing base; Cryptography; Digital signatures; Malware; Virtual machine monitors; Data trustworthiness; cryptographic assurance; digital signatures; malware; system-based assurance;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Dependable and Secure Computing, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1545-5971
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TDSC.2012.71
  • Filename
    6261326