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[gnunetbib] branch master updated: fix


From: gnunet
Subject: [gnunetbib] branch master updated: fix
Date: Thu, 25 Aug 2022 11:01:31 +0200

This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script.

martin-schanzenbach pushed a commit to branch master
in repository gnunetbib.

The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/master by this push:
     new a94b045  fix
a94b045 is described below

commit a94b045ea28bce7369365da99c9bab1fe8b3200a
Author: Martin Schanzenbach <schanzen@gnunet.org>
AuthorDate: Thu Aug 25 11:01:27 2022 +0200

    fix
---
 gnunetbib.bib | 35 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/gnunetbib.bib b/gnunetbib.bib
index fcda3a7..6eaed79 100644
--- a/gnunetbib.bib
+++ b/gnunetbib.bib
@@ -40,12 +40,41 @@
        author = "Schanzenbach, Martin",
        title = "Towards Self-sovereign, decentralized personal data sharing 
and identity management",
        type = "Dissertation",
-       school = "Technische Universität München",
-       address = "München",
+       school = "Technische Universit{\"a}t M{\"u}nchen",
        year = 2020,
-       keywords = "",
+  address = {Munich}
+       keywords = {DNS, GNU Name System, GNUnet, privacy, ReclaimID},
   www_section = {Self-sovereign identity, GNUnet, GNU Name System},
+  www_tags = selected,
   www_pdf_url = {http://mediatum.ub.tum.de/?id=1545514},
+  url = {https://bibliography.gnunet.org},
+  abstract = {Today, identity management is a key element for commercial and 
private services on
+the Internet. Over the past decade, digital identities evolved away from 
decentralized,
+pseudonymous, user-controlled personas towards centralized, unabiguous 
identities
+managed at and provided through service providers. This development was sparked
+by the requirement of real identities in the context of electronic commerce. 
However, it
+was particularly fuelled later by the emergence of social media and the 
possibilities it
+provides to people in order to establish social connections. The following 
centralization
+of identities at a handful of service providers significantly improved 
usability and
+reliability of identity services. Those benefits come at the expense of other, 
arguably
+equally important areas. For users, it is privacy and the permanent threat of 
being
+tracked and analyzed. For service providers, it is liability and the risk of 
facing significant
+punishment caused by strict privacy regulations which try to counteract the 
former.
+In this thesis, we investigate state-of-the-art approaches to modern identity 
management. We take a look at existing standards and recent research in order 
to understand
+the status quo and how it can be improved. As a result from our research, we 
present the
+following contributions: In order to allow users to reclaim control over their 
identities
+and personal data, we propose a design for a decentralized, self-sovereign 
directory service. This service allows users to share personal data with 
services without the need of a
+trusted third party. Unlike existing research in this area, we propose 
mechanisms which
+allow users to efficiently enforce access control on their data. Further, we 
investigate
+how trust can be established in user-managed, self-sovereign identities. We 
propose a
+trust establishment mechanism through the use of secure name systems. It 
allows users
+and organizations to establish trust relationships and identity assertions 
without the
+need of centralized public key infrastructures (PKIs). Additionally, we show 
how recent
+advancements in the area of non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) protocols 
can be
+leveraged in order to create privacy-preserving attribute-based credentials 
(PP-ABCs)
+suitable for use in self-sovereign identity systems including our proposed 
directory
+service. We provide proof of concept implementations of our designs and 
evaluate them
+to show that they are suitable for practical applications.},
 }
 
 @mastersthesis {mteich-2017,

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