Advanced Networks Colloquium: Babis Papamanthou, "Do You Trust Your Cloud?"

Friday, November 18, 2016
11:00 a.m.
1146 AV Williams Building
Kimberly Edwards
kedwards@umd.edu

Do You Trust Your Cloud?
Verifiability, Accountability and Privacy for Remote Storage and Computation

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 exist 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 theory and systems for efficiently verifying cloud storage queries as well as more expressive queries including conjunctive and disjunctive keyword search, SQL, range search and geometric processing queries, usually appearing in information retrieval and data streaming applications. Second, I will highlight some of my recent work on cloud privacy concerning efficient, I/O-efficient and parallel searching of dynamic encrypted data and will finally talk about a private cloud-based email system (Pmail) with searching capabilities that we are developing at MC2.

Biography
Charalampos (Babis) Papamanthou is an assistant professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he joined in 2013 after a postdoc at UC Berkeley. At Maryland, he is also affiliated with the Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS), where he is a member of the Maryland Cybersecurity Center (MC2). He works on applied cryptography and computer security---and especially on technologies, systems and theory for secure and private cloud computing. While at College Park, he received the Google Faculty Research Award, the Yahoo! Faculty Research Engagement Award, the NetApp Faculty Fellowship, the 2013 UMD Invention of the Year Award, the 2014 Jimmy Lin Award for Invention and the George Corcoran Award for Excellence in Teaching. His research is currently funded by federal agencies (NSF, NIST and NSA) and by the industry (Google, Yahoo!, NetApp and Amazon). His PhD is in Computer Science from Brown University (2011) and he also holds an MSc in Computer Science from the University of Crete (2005), where he was a member of ICS-FORTH. His work has received over 2,000 citations and he has published in venues and journals spanning theoretical and applied cryptography, systems and database security, graph algorithms and visualization and operations research.

 

Audience: Graduate  Undergraduate  Faculty  Post-Docs 

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