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[gnunetbib] branch master updated: fix
From: |
gnunet |
Subject: |
[gnunetbib] branch master updated: fix |
Date: |
Thu, 25 Aug 2022 11:11:15 +0200 |
This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script.
martin-schanzenbach pushed a commit to branch master
in repository gnunetbib.
The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/master by this push:
new 4c9c365 fix
4c9c365 is described below
commit 4c9c3656712c54b29e767117b52ee1dc81bfc4d6
Author: Martin Schanzenbach <schanzen@gnunet.org>
AuthorDate: Thu Aug 25 11:11:11 2022 +0200
fix
---
gnunetbib.bib | 34 ++++------------------------------
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 30 deletions(-)
diff --git a/gnunetbib.bib b/gnunetbib.bib
index 6eaed79..98d930f 100644
--- a/gnunetbib.bib
+++ b/gnunetbib.bib
@@ -48,33 +48,7 @@
www_tags = selected,
www_pdf_url = {http://mediatum.ub.tum.de/?id=1545514},
url = {https://bibliography.gnunet.org},
- abstract = {Today, identity management is a key element for commercial and
private services on
-the Internet. Over the past decade, digital identities evolved away from
decentralized,
-pseudonymous, user-controlled personas towards centralized, unabiguous
identities
-managed at and provided through service providers. This development was sparked
-by the requirement of real identities in the context of electronic commerce.
However, it
-was particularly fuelled later by the emergence of social media and the
possibilities it
-provides to people in order to establish social connections. The following
centralization
-of identities at a handful of service providers significantly improved
usability and
-reliability of identity services. Those benefits come at the expense of other,
arguably
-equally important areas. For users, it is privacy and the permanent threat of
being
-tracked and analyzed. For service providers, it is liability and the risk of
facing significant
-punishment caused by strict privacy regulations which try to counteract the
former.
-In this thesis, we investigate state-of-the-art approaches to modern identity
management. We take a look at existing standards and recent research in order
to understand
-the status quo and how it can be improved. As a result from our research, we
present the
-following contributions: In order to allow users to reclaim control over their
identities
-and personal data, we propose a design for a decentralized, self-sovereign
directory service. This service allows users to share personal data with
services without the need of a
-trusted third party. Unlike existing research in this area, we propose
mechanisms which
-allow users to efficiently enforce access control on their data. Further, we
investigate
-how trust can be established in user-managed, self-sovereign identities. We
propose a
-trust establishment mechanism through the use of secure name systems. It
allows users
-and organizations to establish trust relationships and identity assertions
without the
-need of centralized public key infrastructures (PKIs). Additionally, we show
how recent
-advancements in the area of non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) protocols
can be
-leveraged in order to create privacy-preserving attribute-based credentials
(PP-ABCs)
-suitable for use in self-sovereign identity systems including our proposed
directory
-service. We provide proof of concept implementations of our designs and
evaluate them
-to show that they are suitable for practical applications.},
+ abstract = {Today, identity management is a key element for commercial and
private services on the Internet. Over the past decade, digital identities
evolved away from decentralized, pseudonymous, user-controlled personas towards
centralized, unabiguous identities managed at and provided through service
providers. This development was sparked by the requirement of real identities
in the context of electronic commerce. However, it was particularly fuelled
later by the emergence of socia [...]
}
@mastersthesis {mteich-2017,
@@ -543,9 +517,9 @@ as an evaluation of its performance},
www_tags = selected,
author = {Christian Grothoff and Matthias Wachs and Monika Ermert and
Jacob Appelbaum}
}
-@conference {2018_1,
- title = {reclaimID: Secure, Self-Sovereign Identities using Name
Systems and Attribute-Based Encryption},
- booktitle = {ArXiv e-prints},
+@inproceedings {2018_1,
+ title = {reclaimID: Secure, Self-Sovereign Identities using Name Systems and
Attribute-Based Encryption},
+ booktitle={Proceedings of 17th IEEE International Conference On Trust,
Security And Privacy In Computing And Communications/ 12th IEEE International
Conference On Big Data Science And Engineering (TrustCom/BigDataSE)},
year = {2018},
abstract = {In this paper we present reclaimID: An architecture that
allows users to reclaim their digital identities by securely sharing identity
attributes without the need for a centralised service provider. We propose a
design where user attributes are stored in and shared over a name system under
user-owned namespaces. Attributes are encrypted using attribute-based
encryption (ABE), allowing the user to selectively authorize and revoke access
of requesting parties to subsets of his [...]
keywords = {Computer Science - Cryptography and Security},
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