Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Author is Aura, Tuomas  [Clear All Filters]
2019-11-18
Ahmed, Abu Shohel, Aura, Tuomas.  2018.  Turning Trust Around: Smart Contract-Assisted Public Key Infrastructure. 2018 17th IEEE International Conference On Trust, Security And Privacy In Computing And Communications/ 12th IEEE International Conference On Big Data Science And Engineering (TrustCom/BigDataSE). :104–111.
In past, several Certificate Authority (CA) compromise and subsequent mis-issue of certificate raise the importance of certificate transparency and dynamic trust management for certificates. Certificate Transparency (CT) provides transparency for issued certificates, thus enabling corrective measure for a mis-issued certificate by a CA. However, CT and existing mechanisms cannot convey the dynamic trust state for a certificate. To address this weakness, we propose Smart Contract-assisted PKI (SCP) - a smart contract based PKI extension - to manage dynamic trust network for PKI. SCP enables distributed trust in PKI, provides a protocol for managing dynamic trust, assures trust state of a certificate, and provides a better trust experience for end-users.
2017-09-05
Ruohonen, Jukka, Šćepanović, Sanja, Hyrynsalmi, Sami, Mishkovski, Igor, Aura, Tuomas, Leppänen, Ville.  2016.  Correlating File-based Malware Graphs Against the Empirical Ground Truth of DNS Graphs. Proccedings of the 10th European Conference on Software Architecture Workshops. :30:1–30:6.

This exploratory empirical paper investigates whether the sharing of unique malware files between domains is empirically associated with the sharing of Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and the sharing of normal, non-malware files. By utilizing a graph theoretical approach with a web crawling dataset from F-Secure, the paper finds no robust statistical associations, however. Unlike what might be expected from the still continuing popularity of shared hosting services, the sharing of IP addresses through the domain name system (DNS) seems to neither increase nor decrease the sharing of malware files. In addition to these exploratory empirical results, the paper contributes to the field of DNS mining by elaborating graph theoretical representations that are applicable for analyzing different network forensics problems.