利用保护隐私的耗尽系统减少国家间关系的漏洞库存

Thomas Reinhold;Philipp Kuehn;Daniel Günther;Thomas Schneider;Christian Reuter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

网络空间是一个脆弱的结构,受到不同行为者恶意网络操作的威胁,IT硬件和软件的漏洞构成了此类活动的基础,因此也对全球IT安全构成了威胁。人工智能领域的进步加速了这一发展,无论是支持人工智能的网络武器、自动化的网络防御措施,还是基于人工智能的威胁和漏洞检测。特别是国家行为者,出于其长期战略安全利益,经常储存此类漏洞和利用知识,以使其军事或情报部门能够开展网络空间行动。虽然目前正在国际层面讨论限制这些发展并通过披露漏洞来加强全球信息技术安全的条约和法规,但由于国家对披露独特知识和放弃战术优势的担忧,这些努力受到了阻碍。这导致了一种情况,即多个国家可能会储存至少一些相同的开采,并采取技术措施来实现这些储存的耗尽过程,以保护国家的保密利益,并考虑到相互作用国家的特殊限制以及这些环境中的要求是不存在的。本文提出了一种保护隐私的方法,允许多个缔约国私下比较其漏洞和利用的库存,以检查多个库存中出现的物品,而不披露这些物品,从而可以考虑披露这些物品。我们将我们的系统称为ExTRUST,并表明它是可扩展的,可以承受多种攻击场景。除了政府间环境之外,ExTRUST还可以用于其他零信任用例,例如漏洞奖励程序。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
ExTRUST: Reducing Exploit Stockpiles With a Privacy-Preserving Depletion System for Inter-State Relationships
Cyberspace is a fragile construct threatened by malicious cyber operations of different actors, with vulnerabilities in IT hardware and software forming the basis for such activities, thus also posing a threat to global IT security. Advancements in the field of artificial intelligence accelerate this development, either with artificial intelligence enabled cyber weapons, automated cyber defense measures, or artificial intelligence-based threat and vulnerability detection. Especially state actors, with their long-term strategic security interests, often stockpile such knowledge of vulnerabilities and exploits to enable their military or intelligence service cyberspace operations. While treaties and regulations to limit these developments and to enhance global IT security by disclosing vulnerabilities are currently being discussed on the international level, these efforts are hindered by state concerns about the disclosure of unique knowledge and about giving up tactical advantages. This leads to a situation where multiple states are likely to stockpile at least some identical exploits, with technical measures to enable a depletion process for these stockpiles that preserve state secrecy interests and consider the special constraints of interacting states as well as the requirements within such environments being non-existent. This paper proposes such a privacy-preserving approach that allows multiple state parties to privately compare their stock of vulnerabilities and exploits to check for items that occur in multiple stockpiles without revealing them so that their disclosure can be considered. We call our system ExTRUST and show that it is scalable and can withstand several attack scenarios. Beyond the intergovernmental setting, ExTRUST can also be used for other zero-trust use cases, such as bug-bounty programs.
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