Authors
Seny Kamara, Charalampos Papamanthou, Tom Roeder
Publication date
2012/10/16
Book
Proceedings of the 2012 ACM conference on Computer and communications security
Pages
965-976
Description
Searchable symmetric encryption (SSE) allows a client to encrypt its data in such a way that this data can still be searched. The most immediate application of SSE is to cloud storage, where it enables a client to securely outsource its data to an untrusted cloud provider without sacrificing the ability to search over it.
SSE has been the focus of active research and a multitude of schemes that achieve various levels of security and efficiency have been proposed. Any practical SSE scheme, however, should (at a minimum) satisfy the following properties: sublinear search time, security against adaptive chosen-keyword attacks, compact indexes and the ability to add and delete files efficiently. Unfortunately, none of the previously-known SSE constructions achieve all these properties at the same time. This severely limits the practical value of SSE and decreases its chance of deployment in real-world cloud storage systems …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Kamara, C Papamanthou, T Roeder - Proceedings of the 2012 ACM conference on …, 2012