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Security system designers favor worst-case security measures, such as those derived from differential privacy, due to the strong guarantees they provide. These guarantees, on the downside, result on high penalties on the systems performance. In this paper, we study the Bayes security measure. This measure quantifies the expected advantage over random guessing of an adversary that observes the output of a mechanism. We show that the minimizer of this measure, which indicates its security lower bound, i) is independent from the prior on the secrets, ii) can be estimated efficiently in black-box scenarios, and iii) it enables system designers to find low-risk security parameters without hurting utility. We provide a thorough comparison with respect to well-known measures, identifying the scenarios where our measure is advantageous for designers, which we illustrate empirically on relevant security and privacy problems.
Website Fingerprinting (WF) attacks raise major concerns about users privacy. They employ Machine Learning (ML) to allow a local passive adversary to uncover the Web browsing behavior of a user, even if she browses through an encrypted tunnel (e.g. T
Third-party security apps are an integral part of the Android app ecosystem. Many users install them as an extra layer of protection for their devices. There are hundreds of such security apps, both free and paid in Google Play Store and some of them
Fuchsia is a new open-source operating system created at Google that is currently under active development. The core architectural principles guiding the design and development of the OS include high system modularity and a specific focus on security
Fraud (swindling money, property, or authority by fictionizing, counterfeiting, forging, or imitating things, or by feigning other persons privately) forms its threats against public security and network security. Anti-fraud is essentially the identi
Despite widespread use of smartphones, there is no measurement standard targeted at smartphone security behaviors. In this paper we translate a well-known cybersecurity behavioral scale into the smartphone domain and show that we can improve on this