Denial of service attacks and defenses in decentralized trust management

  • Authors:
  • Jiangtao Li;Ninghui Li;XiaoFeng Wang;Ting Yu

  • Affiliations:
  • Intel Corporation, Santa Clara, CA, USA;Purdue University, Department of Computer Science, West Lafayette, IN, USA;Indiana University, School of Informatics, Bloomington, IN, USA;North Carolina State University, Department of Computer Science, Raleigh, NC, USA

  • Venue:
  • International Journal of Information Security
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

Trust management is an approach to scalable and flexible access control in decentralized systems. In trust management, a server often needs to evaluate a chain of credentials submitted by a client; this requires the server to perform multiple expensive digital signature verifications. In this paper, we study low-bandwidth Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks that exploit the existence of trust management systems to deplete server resources. Although the threat of DoS attacks has been studied for some application-level protocols such as authentication protocols, we show that it is especially destructive for trust management systems. Exploiting the delegation feature in trust management languages, an attacker can forge a long credential chain to force a server to consume a large amount of computing resource. Using game theory as an analytic tool, we demonstrate that unprotected trust management servers will easily fall prey to a witty attacker who moves smartly. We report our empirical study of existing trust management systems, which manifests the gravity of this threat. We also propose a defense technique using credential caching, and show that it is effective in the presence of intelligent attackers.