DocumentCode :
3720537
Title :
Binary fingerprinting codes - can we prove that someone is guilty?!
Author :
Marcel Fernandez;Elena Egorova;Grigory Kabatiansky
Author_Institution :
Departament d´Enginyeria Telem?tica, Universitat Polit?cnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
The Identifiable Parent Property guarantees, with probability 1, the identification of at least one of the traitors by the corresponding traitor tracing schemes, or, by IPP-codes. Unfortunately, for the case of binary codes the IPP property does not hold even in the case of only two traitors. A recent work has considered a natural generalization of IPP-codes for the binary case, where the identifiable parent property should hold with probability almost 1. It has been shown that almost t-IPP codes of nonvanishing rate exist for the case t = 2. Surprisingly enough, collusion secure digital fingerprinting codes do not automatically possess this almost IPP property. In practice, this means that for a given forged fingerprint, say z, a user identified as guilty by the tracing algorithm can deny this claim since he will be able to present a coalition of users that can create the same z, but he does not belong to that coalition. In this paper, we study the case of t-almost IPP codes for t > 2.
Keywords :
"Data security","Encoding","Probability distribution","Binary codes","Biological system modeling","Government","Economics"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Information Forensics and Security (WIFS), 2015 IEEE International Workshop on
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/WIFS.2015.7368558
Filename :
7368558
Link To Document :
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