Intentional Forgetting
Deborah Shands, Carolyn Talcott

TL;DR
This paper advocates for explicit, rigorous mechanisms of intentional forgetting in systems to better eliminate residual sensitive information and improve cybersecurity security practices.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of intentional forgetting, discusses its modeling, and highlights the need for formal specifications and cross-disciplinary research to implement effective forgetting capabilities.
Findings
Identifies the need for explicit forgetting capabilities in system design.
Proposes modeling approaches based on resistance to information disclosure.
Highlights research challenges across multiple domains.
Abstract
Many damaging cybersecurity attacks are enabled when an attacker can access residual sensitive information (e.g. cryptographic keys, personal identifiers) left behind from earlier computation. Attackers can sometimes use residual information to take control of a system, impersonate a user, or manipulate data. Current approaches to addressing access to residual sensitive information aim to patch individual software or hardware vulnerabilities. While such patching approaches are necessary to mitigate sometimes serious security vulnerabilities in the near term, they cannot address the underlying issue: explicit requirements for adequately eliminating residual information and explicit representations of the erasure capabilities of systems are necessary to ensure that sensitive information is handled as expected. This position paper introduces the concept of intentional forgetting and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdversarial Robustness in Machine Learning · Security and Verification in Computing · Advanced Malware Detection Techniques
