The Beginnings of Encrypted Computing In the Cloud 76
eldavojohn writes "A method of computing from a 2009 paper allows the computing of data without ever decrypting it. With cloud computing on the rise, this may be the holy grail of keeping private data private in the cloud. It's called Fully Homomorphic Encryption, and if you've got the computer science/mathematics chops you can read the thesis (PDF). After reworking it and simplifying it, researchers have moved it away from being true, fully homomorphic encryption, but it is now a little closer to being ready for cloud usage. The problem is that the more operations performed on your encrypted data, the more likely it has become 'dirty' or corrupted. To combat this, Gentry developed a way to periodically clean the data by making it self-correcting. The article notes that although this isn't prepared for use in reliable systems, it is a quick jump to implementation just one year after the paper was published — earlier encryption papers would take as much as half a decade until they were implemented at all."
um, no. (Score:5, Interesting)
Practical homomorphic encryption is a fantasy, or at the very least it is so far off that it won't impact any of us any time soon.
If you want to cloudsource sensitive information processing, you will need a highly-secured vendor (most aren't even close). Sorry!
What about just using encfs and fuse? (Score:3, Interesting)
Not going to work (Score:3, Interesting)
This has been tried for at least 3 decades. It could never be made to work efficiently and this approach is also not really going to help. It may have some valid crypto application this time (it never got that far before), but you will have to pump in so many more CPU cycles, that it will be a lot cheaper to just spend then directly on you own PC for any non-crypto stuff.
Side note: The things people will claim to make this mostly BS idea of the cloud seem to work never cease to amaze me.
Newer Advance / Stop the Botnets (Score:3, Interesting)
There's been some progress [taragana.com] since this paper.
It's not there yet, but there's hope.
The good news is this will eventually stop the botnets. One all that computing power is reliably usable, there's profit motive to defend it.
Preprint (Score:3, Interesting)