EN FR
EN FR


Section: Partnerships and Cooperations

European Initiatives

FP7 & H2020 Projects

ERC Consolidator Grant: CIRCUS
  • Title: CIRCUS: An end-to-end verification architecture for building Certified Implementations of Robust, Cryptographically Secure web applications

  • Duration: April 2016 - March 2021

  • Coordinator: Karthikeyan Bhargavn, Inria

  • Abstract: The security of modern web applications depends on a variety of critical components including cryptographic libraries, Transport Layer Security (TLS), browser security mechanisms, and single sign-on protocols. Although these components are widely used, their security guarantees remain poorly understood, leading to subtle bugs and frequent attacks. Rather than fixing one attack at a time, we advocate the use of formal security verification to identify and eliminate entire classes of vulnerabilities in one go.

    CIRCUS proposes to take on this challenge, by verifying the end-to-end security of web applications running in mainstream software. The key idea is to identify the core security components of web browsers and servers and replace them by rigorously verified components that offer the same functionality but with robust security guarantees.

ERC Starting Grant: SECOMP
  • Title: SECOMP: Efficient Formally Secure Compilers to a Tagged Architecture

  • Duration: Jan 2017 - December 2021

  • Coordinator: Catalin Hritcu, Inria

  • Abstract: This new ERC-funded project called SECOMP1 is aimed at leveraging emerging hardware capabilities for fine-grained protection to build the first, efficient secure compilers for realistic programming languages, both low-level (the C language) and high-level (F*, a dependently-typed ML variant). These compilers will provide a secure semantics for all programs and will ensure that high-level abstractions cannot be violated even when interacting with untrusted low-level code. To achieve this level of security without sacrificing efficiency, our secure compilers will target a tagged architecture, which associates a metadata tag to each word and efficiently propagates and checks tags according to software-defined rules. We will use property-based testing and formal verification to provide high confidence that our compilers are indeed secure.

NEXTLEAP
  • Title: NEXTLEAP: NEXT generation Legal Encryption And Privacy

  • Programm: H2020

  • Duration: January 2016 - December 2018

  • Coordinator: Harry Halpin, Inria

  • Other partners: IMDEA, University College London, CNRS, IRI, and Merlinux

  • Abstract: NEXTLEAP aims to create, validate, and deploy protocols that can serve as pillars for a secure, trust-worthy, and privacy-respecting Internet. For this purpose NEXTLEAP will develop an interdisciplinary study of decentralisation that provides the basis on which these protocols cann be designed, working with sociologists to understand user needs. The modular specification of decentralized protocols, implemented as verified open-source software modules, will be done for both privacy-preserving secure federated identity as well as decentralized secure messaging services that hide metadata (e.g., who, when, how often, etc.).