Abstract

With the rapid expansion of Internet of Things (IoT), relevant files are stored and transmitted at the network edge by employing data deduplication to eliminate redundant data for the best accessibility. Although deduplication improves storage and network efficiency, it decreases security strength and performance. Existing schemes usually adopt message-locked encryption (MLE) to encrypt data, which is vulnerable to brute-force attacks. Meanwhile, these schemes utilize proof-of-ownership (PoW) to prevent duplicate-faking attacks, while they suffer from replay attacks or incur large computation overheads. This paper proposes SE-PoW, an efficient and location-aware hybrid encrypted deduplication scheme with a dual-level security-enhanced Proof-of-Ownership in edge computing. Specifically, SE-PoW firstly encrypts files with an inter-edge server-aided randomized convergent encryption (RCE) method and then protects blocks with an intra-edge edge-aided MLE method to balance security and system efficiency. To resist duplicate-faking attacks and replay attacks, SE-PoW performs the dual-level PoW algorithm. Then it combines the verification of a cuckoo filter and the homomorphism of algebraic signatures in sequence to enhance security and improve ownership checking efficiency. Security analysis demonstrates that SE-PoW ensures data security and resists the mentioned attacks. Evaluation results show that SE-PoW reduces up to 61.9% upload time overheads compared with the state-of-the-art schemes.

Full Text
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