Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems

Available online public/governmental services requiring authentication by citizens have considerably expanded in recent years. This has hindered the usability and security associated with credential management by users and service providers. To address the problem, some countries have proposed natio...

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Main Authors: Brandão Luís T. A. N., Christin Nicolas, Danezis George, Anonymous
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-06-01
Series:Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/popets-2015-0022
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spelling doaj-c21ebcf78b644ba480eb65fae0dda13a2021-09-05T13:59:51ZengSciendoProceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies2299-09842015-06-012015213515510.1515/popets-2015-0022popets-2015-0022Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification SystemsBrandão Luís T. A. N.0Christin Nicolas1Danezis George2Anonymous3Carnegie Mellon University & University of LisbonCarnegie Mellon UniversityUniversity College London06ac01f8898481dd 2acdaacbe7cea1fd 5cdec8e65fe87db5 8605e865b1860f8e (SHA256 commitment)Available online public/governmental services requiring authentication by citizens have considerably expanded in recent years. This has hindered the usability and security associated with credential management by users and service providers. To address the problem, some countries have proposed nation-scale identification/authentication systems that intend to greatly reduce the burden of credential management, while seemingly offering desirable privacy benefits. In this paper we analyze two such systems: the Federal Cloud Credential Exchange (FCCX) in the United States and GOV.UK Verify in the United Kingdom, which altogether aim at serving more than a hundred million citizens. Both systems propose a brokered identification architecture, where an online central hub mediates user authentications between identity providers and service providers. We show that both FCCX and GOV.UK Verify suffer from serious privacy and security shortcomings, fail to comply with privacy-preserving guidelines they are meant to follow, and may actually degrade user privacy. Notably, the hub can link interactions of the same user across different service providers and has visibility over private identifiable information of citizens. In case of malicious compromise it is also able to undetectably impersonate users. Within the structural design constraints placed on these nation-scale brokered identification systems, we propose feasible technical solutions to the privacy and security issues we identified. We conclude with a strong recommendation that FCCX and GOV.UK Verify be subject to a more in-depth technical and public review, based on a defined and comprehensive threat model, and adopt adequate structural adjustments.https://doi.org/10.1515/popets-2015-0022nsticidapidentificationauthenticationsurveillanceprivacy enhancing technologiessecure two-party computation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brandão Luís T. A. N.
Christin Nicolas
Danezis George
Anonymous
spellingShingle Brandão Luís T. A. N.
Christin Nicolas
Danezis George
Anonymous
Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems
Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies
nstic
idap
identification
authentication
surveillance
privacy enhancing technologies
secure two-party computation
author_facet Brandão Luís T. A. N.
Christin Nicolas
Danezis George
Anonymous
author_sort Brandão Luís T. A. N.
title Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems
title_short Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems
title_full Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems
title_fullStr Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems
title_full_unstemmed Toward Mending Two Nation-Scale Brokered Identification Systems
title_sort toward mending two nation-scale brokered identification systems
publisher Sciendo
series Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies
issn 2299-0984
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Available online public/governmental services requiring authentication by citizens have considerably expanded in recent years. This has hindered the usability and security associated with credential management by users and service providers. To address the problem, some countries have proposed nation-scale identification/authentication systems that intend to greatly reduce the burden of credential management, while seemingly offering desirable privacy benefits. In this paper we analyze two such systems: the Federal Cloud Credential Exchange (FCCX) in the United States and GOV.UK Verify in the United Kingdom, which altogether aim at serving more than a hundred million citizens. Both systems propose a brokered identification architecture, where an online central hub mediates user authentications between identity providers and service providers. We show that both FCCX and GOV.UK Verify suffer from serious privacy and security shortcomings, fail to comply with privacy-preserving guidelines they are meant to follow, and may actually degrade user privacy. Notably, the hub can link interactions of the same user across different service providers and has visibility over private identifiable information of citizens. In case of malicious compromise it is also able to undetectably impersonate users. Within the structural design constraints placed on these nation-scale brokered identification systems, we propose feasible technical solutions to the privacy and security issues we identified. We conclude with a strong recommendation that FCCX and GOV.UK Verify be subject to a more in-depth technical and public review, based on a defined and comprehensive threat model, and adopt adequate structural adjustments.
topic nstic
idap
identification
authentication
surveillance
privacy enhancing technologies
secure two-party computation
url https://doi.org/10.1515/popets-2015-0022
work_keys_str_mv AT brandaoluistan towardmendingtwonationscalebrokeredidentificationsystems
AT christinnicolas towardmendingtwonationscalebrokeredidentificationsystems
AT danezisgeorge towardmendingtwonationscalebrokeredidentificationsystems
AT anonymous towardmendingtwonationscalebrokeredidentificationsystems
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