Abstract

With the evolution of wireless body area networks (WBANs), wearable equipment will improve the human healthcare service. However, the medical data generated in WBANs increase dramatically with time, and the massive data cause the storage burden. With the help of cloud computing, the cloud service provider (CSP) can assist data owners in storing these data collected by sensors. By keeping their data in the CSP, the data integrity and authenticity is a big concern of data owners. To date, many data integrity auditing protocols have been proposed to address this issue. Most of them rely on traditional public-key mechanism, or identity-based cryptography (IBC), or certificateless cryptography (CLC). However, they suffer from the heavy cost of certificate management, key escrow, or the requirement of a secret channel for each user, respectively. To solve these drawbacks, we propose an efficient certificate-based data integrity auditing protocol for cloud-assisted WBANs. In our protocol, the computation cost in tag generation for a data block is fixed, and is independent of the size of the data block. We prove our protocol is secure in the random oracle model (ROM) and use the Java pairing-based cryptography library (JPBC) to implement the protocol. The experimental results show that our protocol is computationally efficient and practical.

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