Short-Lived Forward-Secure Delegation for TLS

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Abstract

On today's Internet, combining the end-to-end security of TLS with Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) while ensuring the authenticity of connections results in a challenging delegation problem. When CDN servers provide content, they have to authenticate themselves as the origin server to establish a valid end-to-end TLS connection with the client. In standard TLS, the latter requires access to the secret key of the server. To curb this problem, multiple workarounds exist to realize a delegation of the authentication. In this paper, we present a solution that renders key sharing unnecessary and reduces the need for workarounds. By adapting identity-based signatures to this setting, our solution offers short-lived delegations. Additionally, by enabling forward-security, existing delegations remain valid even if the server's secret key leaks. We provide an implementation of the scheme and discuss integration into a TLS stack. In our evaluation, we show that an efficient implementation incurs less overhead than a typical network round trip. Thereby, we propose an alternative approach to current delegation practices on the web.

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APA

Alber, L., More, S., & Ramacher, S. (2020). Short-Lived Forward-Secure Delegation for TLS. In CCSW 2020 - Proceedings of the 2020 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Cloud Computing Security Workshop (pp. 119–132). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3411495.3421362

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