Perfectly Secure Multiparty Computation and the Computational Overhead of Cryptography

被引:0
|
作者
Damgard, Ivan [1 ]
Ishai, Yuval [2 ,3 ]
Kroigaard, Mikkel [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus, Denmark
[2] Technion, Haifa, Israel
[3] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
[4] Tech Univ Eindhoven, Eindhoven, Netherlands
来源
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
TP301 [理论、方法];
学科分类号
081202 ;
摘要
We study the following two related questions: - What are the minimal computational resources required for general secure multiparty computation in the presence of an honest majority? - What are the minimal resources required for two-party primitives such as zero-knowledge proofs and general secure two-party computation? We obtain a nearly tight answer to the first question by presenting a perfectly secure protocol which allows p, players to evaluate an arithmetic circuit of size s by performing a total of O(s log s log(2) n) arithmetic operations, plus all additive term which depends (polynomially) On n and the circuit depth, but only logarithmically On S. Thus, for typical large-scale computations whose circuit; width is much bigger than their depth and the number of players, the amortized overhead is just polylogarithmic in It and s. The protocol provides perfect security with guaranteed output delivery in the presence of an active, adaptive adversary corrupting a (1/3 -epsilon ) fraction of the players, for an arbitrary constant epsilon > 0 and sufficiently large n. The best previous protocols in this setting could only offer computational security with a computational overhead of poly(k, log n, logs), where k is a computational security parameter, or perfect security with a computational overhead of O(n log n). We then apply the above result towards making progress on the second question. Concretely, under standard cryptographic assumptions, we obtain zero-knowledge proofs for circuit satisfiability with 2(-k) soundness error in which the amortized computational overhead per gate is only polylogarithmic in k, improving over the omega(k) overhead of the best previous protocols. Under stronger cryptographic assumptions, we obtain similar results for general secure two-party computation.
引用
收藏
页码:445 / +
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Efficient Secure Multiparty Computational Geometry
    Li Shundong
    Wang Daoshun
    Dai Yiqi
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF ELECTRONICS, 2010, 19 (02): : 324 - 328
  • [42] A Secure Priority Queue; Or: On Secure Datastructures from Multiparty Computation
    Toft, Tomas
    INFORMATION SECURITY AND CRYPTOLOGY - ICISC 2013, 2014, 8565 : 20 - 33
  • [43] Efficient Maliciously Secure Multiparty Computation for RAM
    Keller, Marcel
    Yanai, Avishay
    ADVANCES IN CRYPTOLOGY - EUROCRYPT 2018, PT III, 2018, 10822 : 91 - 124
  • [44] Secure multiparty computation of approximations - (Extended abstract)
    Feigenbaum, J
    Ishai, Y
    Malkin, T
    Nissim, K
    Strauss, MJ
    Wright, RN
    AUTOMATA LANGUAGES AND PROGRAMMING, PROCEEDING, 2001, 2076 : 927 - 938
  • [45] Secure multiparty quantum computation with few qubits
    Lipinska, Victoria
    Ribeiro, Jeremy
    Wehner, Stephanie
    PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2020, 102 (02)
  • [46] Oblivious array access for secure multiparty computation
    Laud, Peeter
    Cryptology and Information Security Series, 2015, 13 : 106 - 128
  • [47] The Broadcast Message Complexity of Secure Multiparty Computation
    Garg, Sanjam
    Goel, Aarushi
    Jain, Abhishek
    ADVANCES IN CRYPTOLOGY - ASIACRYPT 2019, PT I, 2019, 11921 : 426 - 455
  • [48] Multiparty Computation: To Secure Privacy, Do the Math
    Queue, 2023, 21 (06): : 78 - 100
  • [49] Global-Scale Secure Multiparty Computation
    Wang, Xiao
    Ranellucci, Samuel
    Katz, Jonathan
    CCS'17: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2017 ACM SIGSAC CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER AND COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY, 2017, : 39 - 56
  • [50] Asynchronous Secure Multiparty Computation in Constant Time
    Cohen, Ran
    PUBLIC-KEY CRYPTOGRAPHY - PKC 2016, PT II, 2016, 9615 : 183 - 207