Efficient privacy-preserving face recognition

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Abstract

Automatic recognition of human faces is becoming increasingly popular in civilian and law enforcement applications that require reliable recognition of humans. However, the rapid improvement and widespread deployment of this technology raises strong concerns regarding the violation of individuals' privacy. A typical application scenario for privacy-preserving face recognition concerns a client who privately searches for a specific face image in the face image database of a server. In this paper we present a privacy-preserving face recognition scheme that substantially improves over previous work in terms of communication-and computation efficiency: the most recent proposal of Erkin et al. (PETS'09) requires rounds and computationally expensive operations on homomorphically encrypted data to recognize a face in a database of M faces. Our improved scheme requires only rounds and has a substantially smaller online communication complexity (by a factor of 15 for each database entry) and less computation complexity. Our solution is based on known cryptographic building blocks combining homomorphic encryption with garbled circuits. Our implementation results show the practicality of our scheme also for large databases (e.g., for M = 1000 we need less than 13 seconds and less than 4 MByte online communication on two 2.4GHz PCs connected via Gigabit Ethernet). © 2010 Springer-Verlag.

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APA

Sadeghi, A. R., Schneider, T., & Wehrenberg, I. (2010). Efficient privacy-preserving face recognition. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 5984 LNCS, pp. 229–244). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-14423-3_16

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