Stochastic Dynamic Cache Partitioning for Encrypted Content Delivery
Andrea Araldo, Gyorgy Dan, Dario Rossi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a privacy-preserving cache allocation algorithm for encrypted content delivery, enabling ISPs to optimize cache usage without accessing specific content details, thus balancing efficiency and privacy.
Contribution
It proposes a stochastic subgradient-based cache allocation method that preserves content privacy while maximizing cache hit rates, validated through extensive simulations.
Findings
Achieves within 10% of the global optimal cache allocation.
Demonstrates feasibility of content-oblivious caching in encrypted environments.
Converges efficiently under both stationary and non-stationary content popularity.
Abstract
In-network caching is an appealing solution to cope with the increasing bandwidth demand of video, audio and data transfer over the Internet. Nonetheless, an increasing share of content delivery services adopt encryption through HTTPS, which is not compatible with traditional ISP-managed approaches like transparent and proxy caching. This raises the need for solutions involving both Internet Service Providers (ISP) and Content Providers (CP): by design, the solution should preserve business-critical CP information (e.g., content popularity, user preferences) on the one hand, while allowing for a deeper integration of caches in the ISP architecture (e.g., in 5G femto-cells) on the other hand. In this paper we address this issue by considering a content-oblivious ISP-operated cache. The ISP allocates the cache storage to various content providers so as to maximize the bandwidth savings…
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