Method to Fully Process Encrypted Data Without Knowing Its Content
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on Fri, July 3rd, 2009
From IBM researcher Craig Gentry
IBM's solution, formulated by IBM Researcher Craig Gentry, uses a mathematical object called an 'ideal lattice,' and allows people to fully interact with encrypted data in ways previously thought impossible. With the breakthrough, computer vendors storing the confidential, electronic data of others will be able to fully analyze data on their client's behalf without expensive interaction with the client, and without seeing any of the private data. With Gentry's technique, the analysis of encrypted information can yield the same detailed analysis as if the original data was fully visible to all.
Using the solution could help strengthen the business model of 'cloud computing,' where a computer vendor is entrusted to host the confidential data of others in a ubiquitous Internet presence. It might better enable a cloud computing vendor to perform computations on clients' data at their request, such as analyzing sales patterns, without exposing the original data.
Other potential applications include enabling filters to identify spam, even in encrypted email, or protecting information contained in electronic medical records. The breakthrough might also one day enable computer users to retrieve information from a search engine without the search engine knowing precisely what was requested.
“At IBM, as we aim to help businesses and governments operate in more intelligent ways, we are also pursuing the future of privacy and security,” said Charles Lickel, vice president of Software Research at IBM. “Fully homomorphic encryption is a bit like enabling a layperson to perform flawless neurosurgery while blindfolded, and without later remembering the episode. We believe this breakthrough will enable businesses to make more informed decisions, based on more studied analysis, without compromising privacy. We also think that the lattice approach holds potential for helping to solve additional cryptography challenges in the future."
Two fathers of modern encryption - Ron Rivest and Leonard Adleman - together with Michael Dertouzos, introduced and struggled with the notion of fully homomorphic encryption approximately 30 years ago. Although advances through the years offered partial solutions to this problem, a full solution that achieves all the desired properties of homomorphic encryption did not exist until now
IBM enjoys a tradition of making major cryptography breakthroughs, such as the design of the Data Encryption Standard in 1973, and the first, lattice-based encryption with a rigorous proof-of-security in 1997. IBM has also made advancements that have helped advance Internet security.
Craig Gentry conducted research on privacy homomorphism while he was a summer student at IBM Research and while working on his PhD at Stanford University.

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