Trustworthy Computing with Untrusted Resources

Wednesday, February 27, 2013 - 10:00am - 11:15am
KEC 1007

Charalampos Papamanthou
Postdoctoral Researcher
Computer Science Division
UC Berkeley

Abstract:
In the age of big data, cloud computing plays a major role in processing and 
analyzing massive

amounts of information. Services like Amazon S3 and EC2 offer easily accessible 
outsourced storage and computation, gradually replacing our local hard drives 
and desktop machines. Nevertheless, many security concerns have arisen in this 
new paradigm. In an untrusted cloud setting, users' data and computations can 
be potentially tampered with and sensitive data could be leaked to unauthorized 
parties.

In this talk, I will present my work that tackles the above mentioned problems 
through protocols and systems that offer verifiability and privacy assurances 
of data and computations in the cloud (or generally in untrusted environments). 
First, I will review some of my work on securing storage applications 
efficiently and present a fast and scalable system for verifying dynamic data 
objects stored at untrusted cloud servers. Second, I will describe applied 
cryptographic techniques for verifying more expressive queries than simple 
storage queries. Such queries include conjunctive and disjunctive keyword 
search, SQL, range search and statistical queries, usually appearing in 
information retrieval and data streaming applications. I will show that my 
protocols are efficient both in theory and in practice. I will conclude by 
highlighting some of my recent work on cloud privacy concerning efficient and 
parallel searching of dynamic encrypted data and by summarizing future research 
!
directions.

Speaker Biography: Charalampos (Babis) Papamanthou is a postdoctoral researcher at UC Berkeley. He works with Dawn Song on the areas of applied cryptography and computer security---and especially on technologies, systems and theory for secure and private cloud computing. He obtained his PhD and MSc in Computer Science from Brown University in 2007 and 2011 respectively, where he was advised by Roberto Tamassia. While at Brown, he was the recipient of the Kanellakis and van Dam fellowships and he also interned at Intel Research (2008) and Microsoft Research (2010). Before graduate school, he studied in Greece at the University of Crete (MSc) and the University of Macedonia (BSc). He has published in venues and journals spanning theoretical and applied cryptography, systems and database security, graph algorithms and visualization and operations research.
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