Open AccessPosted Content
Practical Adaptive Oblivious Transfer from Simple Assumptions.
Matthew Green,Susan Hohenberger +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed an adaptive oblivious transfer (OT) protocol, where a sender commits to a database of messages and then repeatedly interacts with a receiver in such a way that the receiver obtains one message per interaction of his choice (and nothing more) while the sender learns nothing about any of the choices.
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Abstract: In an adaptive oblivious transfer (OT) protocol, a sender commits to a database of messages and then repeatedly interacts with a receiver in such a way that the receiver obtains one message per interaction of his choice (and nothing more) while the sender learns nothing about any of the choices. Recently, there has been significant effort to design practical adaptive OT schemes and to use these protocols as a building block for larger database applications. To be well suited for these applications, the underlying OT protocol should: (1) support an efficient initialization phase where one commitment can support an arbitrary number of receivers who are guaranteed of having the same view of the database, (2) execute transfers in time independent of the size of the database, and (3) satisfy a strong notion of security under a simple assumption in the standard model. We present the first adaptive OT protocol simultaneously satisfying these requirements. The sole complexity assumption required is that given (g, g, g, g, Q), where g generates a bilinear group of prime order p and a, b, c are selected randomly from Zp, it is hard to decide if Q = g. All prior protocols in the standard model either do not meet our efficiency requirements or require dynamic “q-based” assumptions. Our construction makes an important change to the established “assisted decryption” technique for designing adaptive OT. As in prior works, the sender commits to a database of n messages by publishing an encryption of each message and a signature on each encryption. Then, each transfer phase can be executed in time independent of n as the receiver blinds one of the encryptions and proves knowledge of the blinding factors and a signature on this encryption, after which the sender helps the receiver decrypt the chosen ciphertext. One of the main obstacles to designing an adaptive OT scheme from a simple assumption is realizing a suitable signature for this purpose (i.e., enabling signatures on group elements in a manner that later allows for efficient proofs.) We make the observation that a secure signature scheme is not necessary for this paradigm, provided that signatures can only be forged in certain ways. We then show how to efficiently integrate an insecure signature into a secure adaptive OT construction.
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Citations
Tightly Secure Signatures and Public-Key Encryption
Dennis Hofheinz,Tibor Jager +1 more
- 19 Aug 2012
TL;DR: This work constructs the first public-key encryption scheme whose chosen-ciphertext i.e., IND-CCA security can be proved under a standard assumption and does not degrade in either the number of users or theNumber of ciphertexts.
Constant-Size structure-preserving signatures: generic constructions and simple assumptions
Masayuki Abe,Melissa Chase,Bernardo David,Markulf Kohlweiss,Ryo Nishimaki,Miyako Ohkubo +5 more
- 02 Dec 2012
TL;DR: This paper first gives two general frameworks for constructing fully secure signature schemes from weaker building blocks such as variations of one-time signatures and random-message secure signatures, and instantiate them based on simple assumptions over symmetric and asymmetric bilinear groups.
Tightly secure signatures and public-key encryption
Dennis Hofheinz,Tibor Jager +1 more
TL;DR: This work constructs the first public-key encryption (PKE) scheme whose chosen-ciphertext security can be proved under a standard assumption and does not degrade in either the number of users or theNumber of ciphertexts.
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•Posted Content
Tagged One-Time Signatures: Tight Security and Optimal Tag Size.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented an efficient structure-preserving tagged one-time signature scheme with tight security reductions to the decision-linear assumption and gave rise to the currently most efficient structurepreserving signature scheme based on the decisionliner assumption with constant-size signatures of only 14 group elements.
Constant-Size Structure-Preserving Signatures: Generic Constructions and Simple Assumptions
TL;DR: In this paper, the Even-Goldreich-Micali framework was used to construct structure-preserving signature schemes based on simple assumptions such as decisional linear and random message secure signatures.
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