ACE-CSR Seminar: Elements of Trust in Named-Data Networking

Speaker: Prof. Gene Tsudik, UC Irvine
UCL Contact: Emiliano DeCristofaro (Visitors from outside UCL please email in advance).
Date/Time: 22 Jul 14, 16:00 - 17:00
Venue: 1.02
Further Information: See also http://sec.cs.ucl.ac.uk/ace_csr/seminars/

Abstract

In the last 4-5 years, several major research efforts have sprung up aiming to design a set of potential next-generation Internet architectures. Named Data Networking (NDN) is one such effort. NDN avoids IP's host-based, point-to-point networking approach in order to better accommodate new and emerging patterns of communication. NDN treats data as a first class object, explicitly naming it, instead of its location. Unlike the current Internet which secures the communication "pipe" between hosts, NDN secures data -- a design choice that decouples trust in data from trust in hosts, thus enabling scalable communication mechanisms, such as data caching in routers to optimize bandwidth. NDN poses many interesting security and privacy challenges, including: trust management, DoS resilience as well as content protection and privacy.

This talk will start with a brief overview of NDN and a summary of various security and privacy issues. The focus will be on network-layer trust management. Motivated by the need to mitigate so-called "content poisoning" attacks, we explore the design of a trust management architecture for NDN.

Prof. Gene Tsudik

Gene Tsudik is a Chancellor's Professor of Computer Science at the UC Irvine (UCI). He obtained his PhD in Computer Science from USC in 1991. Before coming to UCI in 2000, he was at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory (1991-1996) and USC/ISI (1996-2000). Over the years, his research interests included numerous topics in security, privacy and applied cryptography. Since 2009, he serves as the Editor-in-Chief of ACM Transactions on Information and Systems Security (TISSEC). He's a former Fulbright Scholar and an IEEE Fellow.