nca

ASE: Authenticated Statement Exchange

Benjamin Fuller, Roger Khazan, Joseph Cooley, and Galen Pickard. ASE: Authenticated Statement Exchange. IEEE Network Computing and Applications 2010.  Best paper award.

Abstract

Applications often re-transmit the same data, such as digital certificates, during repeated communication instances. Avoiding such superfluous transmissions with caching, while complicated, may be necessary in order to operate in low-bandwidth, high-latency wireless networks or in order to reduce communication load in shared, mobile networks.

This paper presents a general framework and an accompanying software library, called “Authenticated Statement Exchange” (ASE), for helping applications implement persistent caching of application specific data. ASE supports secure caching of a number of predefined data types common to secure communication protocols and allows applications to define new data types to be handled by ASE.

ASE is applicable to many applications. The paper describes the use of ASE in one such application, secure group chat. In a recent real-use deployment, ASE was instrumental in allowing secure group chat to operate over low-bandwidth satellite links.

GROK: A Practical System for Securing Group Communications

Joseph Cooley, Roger Khazan, Benjamin Fuller, and Galen Pickard.  GROK: A Practical System for Securing Group Communications.  IEEE Network Computing and Applications 2010.  Best paper nominee.

Abstract

We have designed and implemented a general-purpose cryptographic building block, called GROK, for securing communication among groups of entities in networks composed of high-latency, low-bandwidth, intermittently connected links. During the process, we solved a number of non-trivial system problems. This paper describes these problems and our solutions, and motivates and justifies these solutions from three viewpoints: usability, efficiency, and security. The solutions described in this paper have been tempered by securing a widely-used group-oriented application, group text chat. We implemented a prototype extension to a popular text chat client called Pidgin and evaluated it in a real-world scenario. Based on our experiences, these solutions are useful to designers of group-oriented systems specifically, and secure systems in general.