- From: David Chadwick <d.w.chadwick@kent.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2012 19:17:47 +0100
- To: Kingsley Idehen <kidehen@openlinksw.com>
- CC: Ben Laurie <benl@google.com>, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net>, "Klaas Wierenga (kwiereng)" <kwiereng@cisco.com>, "public-identity@w3.org" <public-identity@w3.org>, "public-philoweb@w3.org" <public-philoweb@w3.org>, "saag@ietf.org" <saag@ietf.org>, "public-webid@w3.org" <public-webid@w3.org>, "public-privacy@w3.org" <public-privacy@w3.org>
On 18/10/2012 18:33, Kingsley Idehen wrote: > On 10/18/12 12:56 PM, David Chadwick wrote: >> and if the user puts his/her email address attribute in the U-Prove >> token??? > > Then they've broken un-linkability since a mailto: scheme URI is the > ultimate unit of privacy compromise on today's Internet and Web, yes I know. My main point was that using U-Prove or Idemix is employing a very sophisticated privacy protecting encryption scheme that can easily and trivially be undone by everyday users who provide their email address attributes inside the tokens. So I suspect the applicability of these tokens will be quite limited regards David bearing > in mind the state of the underground personal information networks. > Every social network uses your mailto: scheme URI as a key component. > Even if they don't share this data with 3rd parties, other pieces of the > puzzle come together quite easily due to the fundamental semantics > associated with mailto: scheme URIs i.e., you only need to have them in > an inverseFunctionalProperty relationship for entropy to drive the rest > of the profile coalescence. > > The world I envisage starts with the ability to generate (with ease) > X.509 certificates bearing WebIDs in their SAN slots. We will have many > such certificates for a variety of purposes. An email address or any > other overtly identifiable data isn't a mandatory component an X.509 > certificate :-) > > If I want to send something that's only readable by You, I would encrypt > that email via S/MIME. When I make an access policy or resource ACL I > tend not to require email addresses, for instance [1]. > > Links: > > 1. http://bit.ly/Rbnayv -- some posts about the use of social entity > relationship semantics to constrain access to my personal data space on > the Web. > > Kingsley >> >> David >> >> On 18/10/2012 17:52, Kingsley Idehen wrote: >>> On 10/18/12 12:06 PM, Ben Laurie wrote: >>>> On 18 October 2012 16:41, Kingsley Idehen <kidehen@openlinksw.com> >>>> wrote: >>>>> On 10/18/12 11:34 AM, Ben Laurie wrote: >>>>>> On 9 October 2012 14:19, Henry Story <henry.story@bblfish.net> wrote: >>>>>>> Still in my conversations I have found that many people in security >>>>>>> spaces >>>>>>> just don't seem to be able to put the issues in context, and can >>>>>>> get >>>>>>> sidetracked >>>>>>> into not wanting any linkability at all. Not sure how to fix that. >>>>>> You persist in missing the point, which is why you can't fix it. The >>>>>> point is that we want unlinkability to be possible. Protocols that do >>>>>> not permit it or make it difficult are problematic. I have certainly >>>>>> never said that you should always be unlinked, that would be stupid >>>>>> (in fact, I once wrote a paper about how unpleasant it would be). >>>>>> >>>>>> As I once wrote, anonymity should be the substrate. Once you have >>>>>> that, you can the build on it to be linked when you choose to be, and >>>>>> not linked when you choose not to be. If it is not the substrate, >>>>>> then >>>>>> you do not have this choice. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> Do you have example of what you describe? By that question I mean: >>>>> implicit >>>>> anonymity as a functional substrate of some realm that we experience >>>>> today? >>>> That's what selective disclosure systems like U-Prove and the PRIME >>>> project are all about. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> Ben, >>> >>> How is the following incongruent with the fundamental points we've been >>> trying to make about the combined effects of URIs, Linked Data, and >>> Logic en route to controlling privacy at Web-scale? >>> >>> Excerpt from Microsoft page [1]: >>> >>> A U-Prove token is a new type of credential similar to a PKI certificate >>> that can encode attributes of any type, but with two important >>> differences: >>> >>> 1) The issuance and presentation of a token is unlinkable due to the >>> special type of public key and signature encoded in the token; the >>> cryptographic “wrapping” of the attributes contain no correlation >>> handles. This prevents unwanted tracking of users when they use their >>> U-Prove tokens, even by colluding insiders. >>> >>> 2) Users can minimally disclose information about what attributes are >>> encoded in a token in response to dynamic verifier policies. As an >>> example, a user may choose to only disclose a subset of the encoded >>> attributes, prove that her undisclosed name does not appear on a >>> blacklist, or prove that she is of age without disclosing her actual >>> birthdate. >>> >>> >>> Why are you assuming that a hyperlink based pointer (de-referencable >>> URI) placed in the SAN of minimalist X.509 certificate (i.e., one that >>> has now personally identifiable information) can't deliver the above and >>> more? >>> >>> Please note, WebID is a piece of the picture. Linked Data, Entity >>> Relationship Semantics and Logic are other critical parts. That's why >>> there isn't a golden ontology for resource access policies, the resource >>> publisher can construct a plethora of resource access policies en route >>> to leveraging the power of machine discernible entity relationship >>> semantics and first-order logic. >>> >>> In a most basic super paranoid scenario, if I want to constrain access >>> to a resource to nebulous entity "You" I would share a PKCS#12 document >>> with that entity. I would also have an access policy in place based on >>> the data in said document. I would also call "You" by phone to give you >>> the password of that PKCS#12 document. Once that's all sorted, you can >>> open the document, get your crytpo data installed in your local keystore >>> and then visit the resource I've published :-) >>> >>> Links: >>> >>> 1. http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/u-prove/ >>> 2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-knowledge_proof -- I don't see >>> anything about that being incompatible with what the combined use of >>> de-referencable URIs based names, Linked Data, Entity Relationship >>> Semantics, Reasoning, and existing PKI deliver. >>> >> >> > >
Received on Thursday, 18 October 2012 18:18:26 UTC