Paper 2016/411
Polymorphic Encryption and Pseudonymisation for Personalised Healthcare
Eric Verheul, Bart Jacobs, Carlo Meijer, Mireille Hildebrandt, and Joeri de Ruiter
Abstract
Polymorphic encryption and Pseudonymisation, abbreviated as PEP, form
a novel approach for the management of sensitive personal data,
especially in health care. Traditional encryption is rather rigid:
once encrypted, only one key can be used to decrypt the data. This
rigidity is becoming an every greater problem in the context of big
data analytics, where different parties who wish to investigate part
of an encrypted data set all need the one key for decryption.
Polymorphic encryption is a new cryptographic technique that solves
these problems. Together with the associated technique of polymorphic
pseudonymisation new security and privacy guarantees can be given
which are essential in areas such as (personalised) healthcare,
medical data collection via self-measurement apps, and more generally
in privacy-friendly identity management and data analytics.
The key ideas of polymorphic encryption are:
1. Directly after generation, data can be encrypted in a
`polymorphic' manner and stored at a (cloud) storage facility in
such a way that the storage provider cannot get access. Crucially,
there is no need to a priori fix who gets to see the data, so that
the data can immediately be protected.
For instance a PEP-enabled self-measurement device will store all its
measurement data in polymorphically encrypted form in a back-end data
base.
2. Later on it can be decided who can decrypt the data. This
decision will be made on the basis of a policy, in which the data
subject should play a key role.
The user of the PEP-enabled device can, for instance, decide that
doctors
Metadata
- Available format(s)
-
PDF
- Category
- Cryptographic protocols
- Publication info
- Preprint.
- Keywords
- ElGamalpublic key encryptionpseudonymisationhealthcareimplementation
- Contact author(s)
- bart @ cs ru nl
- History
- 2016-09-30: revised
- 2016-04-28: received
- See all versions
- Short URL
- https://ia.cr/2016/411
- License
-
CC BY
BibTeX
@misc{cryptoeprint:2016/411, author = {Eric Verheul and Bart Jacobs and Carlo Meijer and Mireille Hildebrandt and Joeri de Ruiter}, title = {Polymorphic Encryption and Pseudonymisation for Personalised Healthcare}, howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2016/411}, year = {2016}, url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2016/411} }