Identity-Based Encryption with Cloud Revocation
Authority and Its Applications
Abstract
Identity-based encryption (IBE) is a public key cryptosystem and
eliminates the demands of public key infrastructure (PKI) and certificate
administration in conventional public key settings. Due to the absence of PKI,
the revocation problem is a critical issue in IBE
settings. Several revocable IBE schemes have been proposed regarding this
issue. Quite recently, by embedding an outsourcing computation technique into
IBE, Li et al. proposed a revocable IBE scheme with a key-update cloudservice
provider (KU-CSP). However, their scheme has two shortcomings. One is that the
computation and communication costs are higher than previous revocable IBE
schemes. The other shortcoming is lack of scalability in the sense that the
KU-CSP must keep a secret value for each user. In the article, we propose a new
revocable IBE scheme with a cloud revocation authority (CRA)
to solve the two shortcomings, namely, the performance is significantly
improved and the CRA holds only a system secret for all the users. For security
analysis, we demonstrate that the proposed scheme is semantically secure under
the decisional bilinear Diffie-Hellman (DBDH) assumption. Finally, we extend the
proposed revocable IBE scheme to present a CRA-aided authentication scheme with
period-limited privileges for managing a large number of various cloud services.
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