TL;DR
This paper introduces Secure Allegation Escrows (SAE), a cryptographic protocol enabling groups of parties to securely collect, match, and de-anonymize allegations only when a threshold of matching reports is reached, ensuring privacy and trust.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel multi-party escrow system with cryptographic guarantees, including new authentication and matching algorithms, and provides formal security proofs and practical evaluation.
Findings
SAE prevents de-anonymization by a minority of parties.
The matching algorithm effectively groups similar allegations.
Prototype implementation demonstrates practical feasibility.
Abstract
For fear of retribution, the victim of a crime may be willing to report it only if other victims of the same perpetrator also step forward. Common examples include 1) identifying oneself as the victim of sexual harassment, especially by a person in a position of authority or 2) accusing an influential politician, an authoritarian government, or ones own employer of corruption. To handle such situations, legal literature has proposed the concept of an allegation escrow: a neutral third-party that collects allegations anonymously, matches them against each other, and de-anonymizes allegers only after de-anonymity thresholds (in terms of number of co-allegers), pre-specified by the allegers, are reached. An allegation escrow can be realized as a single trusted third party; however, this party must be trusted to keep the identity of the alleger and content of the allegation private. To…
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