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2022-06-08
Septianto, Daniel, Lukas, Mahawan, Bagus.  2021.  USB Flash Drives Forensic Analysis to Detect Crown Jewel Data Breach in PT. XYZ (Coffee Shop Retail - Case Study). 2021 9th International Conference on Information and Communication Technology (ICoICT). :286–290.
USB flash drives are used widely to store or transfer data among the employees in the company. There was greater concern about leaks of information especially company crown jewel or intellectual property data inside the USB flash drives because of theft, loss, negligence or fraud. This study is a real case in XYZ company which aims to find remaining the company’s crown jewel or intellectual property data inside the USB flash drives that belong to the employees. The research result showed that sensitive information (such as user credentials, product recipes and customer credit card data) could be recovered from the employees’ USB flash drives. It could obtain a high-risk impact on the company as reputational damage and sabotage product from the competitor. This result will help many companies to increase security awareness in protecting their crown jewel by having proper access control and to enrich knowledge regarding digital forensic for investigation in the company or enterprise.
2020-01-21
Soltani, Reza, Nguyen, Uyen Trang, An, Aijun.  2019.  Practical Key Recovery Model for Self-Sovereign Identity Based Digital Wallets. 2019 IEEE Intl Conf on Dependable, Autonomic and Secure Computing, Intl Conf on Pervasive Intelligence and Computing, Intl Conf on Cloud and Big Data Computing, Intl Conf on Cyber Science and Technology Congress (DASC/PiCom/CBDCom/CyberSciTech). :320–325.
Recent years have seen an increased interest in digital wallets for a multitude of use cases including online banking, cryptocurrency, and digital identity management. Digital wallets play a pivotal role in the secure management of cryptographic keys and credentials, and for providing certain identity management services. In this paper, we examine a proof-of-concept digital wallet in the context of Self-Sovereign Identity and provide a practical decentralized key recovery solution using Shamir's secret sharing scheme and Hyperledger Indy distributed ledger technology.
2018-08-23
Camenisch, Jan, Drijvers, Manu, Dubovitskaya, Maria.  2017.  Practical UC-Secure Delegatable Credentials with Attributes and Their Application to Blockchain. Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security. :683–699.
Certification of keys and attributes is in practice typically realized by a hierarchy of issuers. Revealing the full chain of issuers for certificate verification, however, can be a privacy issue since it can leak sensitive information about the issuer's organizational structure or about the certificate owner. Delegatable anonymous credentials solve this problem and allow one to hide the full delegation (issuance) chain, providing privacy during both delegation and presentation of certificates. However, the existing delegatable credentials schemes are not efficient enough for practical use. In this paper, we present the first hierarchical (or delegatable) anonymous credential system that is practical. To this end, we provide a surprisingly simple ideal functionality for delegatable credentials and present a generic construction that we prove secure in the UC model. We then give a concrete instantiation using a recent pairing-based signature scheme by Groth and describe a number of optimizations and efficiency improvements that can be made when implementing our concrete scheme. The latter might be of independent interest for other pairing-based schemes as well. Finally, we report on an implementation of our scheme in the context of transaction authentication for blockchain, and provide concrete performance figures.
2015-05-06
Ahmad, A., Hassan, M.M., Aziz, A..  2014.  A Multi-token Authorization Strategy for Secure Mobile Cloud Computing. Mobile Cloud Computing, Services, and Engineering (MobileCloud), 2014 2nd IEEE International Conference on. :136-141.

Cloud computing is an emerging paradigm shifting the shape of computing models from being a technology to a utility. However, security, privacy and trust are amongst the issues that can subvert the benefits and hence wide deployment of cloud computing. With the introduction of omnipresent mobile-based clients, the ubiquity of the model increases, suggesting a still higher integration in life. Nonetheless, the security issues rise to a higher degree as well. The constrained input methods for credentials and the vulnerable wireless communication links are among factors giving rise to serious security issues. To strengthen the access control of cloud resources, organizations now commonly acquire Identity Management Systems (IdM). This paper presents that the most popular IdM, namely OAuth, working in scope of Mobile Cloud Computing has many weaknesses in authorization architecture. In particular, authors find two major issues in current IdM. First, if the IdM System is compromised through malicious code, it allows a hacker to get authorization of all the protected resources hosted on a cloud. Second, all the communication links among client, cloud and IdM carries complete authorization token, that can allow hacker, through traffic interception at any communication link, an illegitimate access of protected resources. We also suggest a solution to the reported problems, and justify our arguments with experimentation and mathematical modeling.