Jerry Fahrni

Pharmacy Informatics and Technology

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Self destructing data for the cloud

Posted on August 18, 2009 by Jerry Fahrni
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One of the most frequently cited reasons for not utilizing cloud based storage is security. While the self-destructing data solution described below wouldn’t work for healthcare secondary to the need to archive information for long periods of time, it would certainly work for any personal data sent or received over the internet. The ability to put a time-bomb in a document is appealing. Read on to find out more.

Vanish is a research system designed to give users control over the lifetime of personal data stored on the web or in the cloud. Specifically, all copies of Vanish encrypted data — even archived or cached copies — will become permanently unreadable at a specific time, without any action on the part of the user or any third party or centralized service.

For example, using the Firefox Vanish plugin, a user can create an email, a Google Doc document, a Facebook message, or a blog comment — specifying that the document or message should “vanish” in 8 hours. Before that 8-hour timeout expires, anyone who has access to the data can read it; however after that timer expires, nobody can read that web content — not the user, not Google, not Facebook, not a hacker who breaks into the cloud service, and not even someone who obtains a warrant for that data. That data — regardless of where stored or archived prior to the timeout — simply self-destructs and becomes permanently unreadable.

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Categories: Cloud Computing | Tags: Cloud Computing, Cool Stuff, Security
Notice: This work is licensed under a BY-NC-SA. Permalink: Self destructing data for the cloud
Deaths caused by postoperative hydration
What are you going to do with all that data?

One Response to “Self destructing data for the cloud”

  1. Rob Fahrni says:
    August 18, 2009 at 1:37 pm

    Very interesting.

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