Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

What a lovely hat

Is it made out of tin foil?

Paper 2024/1448

Randomness in Private Sequential Stateless Protocols

Hari Krishnan P. Anilkumar, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Varun Narayanan, University of California, Los Angeles
Manoj Prabhakaran, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Vinod M. Prabhakaran, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Abstract

A significant body of work in information-theoretic cryptography has been devoted to the fundamental problem of understanding the power of randomness in private computation. This has included both in-depth study of the randomness complexity of specific functions (e.g., Couteau and Ros ́en, ASIACRYPT 2022, gives an upper bound of 6 for n-party $\mathsf{AND}$), and results for broad classes of functions (e.g., Kushilevitz et al. STOC 1996, gives an $O(1)$ upper bound for all functions with linear-sized circuits). In this work, we make further progress on both fronts by studying randomness complexity in a new simple model of secure computation called Private Sequential Stateless (PSS) model. We show that functions with $O(1)$ randomness complexity in the PSS model are exactly those with constant-width branching programs, restricting to “speak-constant-times” protocols and to “read-constant-times” branching programs. Towards this our main construction is a novel PSS protocol for “strongly regular branching programs” (SRBP). As we show, any constant-width branching program can be converted to a constant-width SRBP, yielding one side of our characterization. The converse direction uses ideas from Kushilevitz et al. to translate randomness to communication. Our protocols are concretely efficient, has a simple structure, covers the broad class of functions with small-width, read-once (or read-a-few-times) branching programs, and hence may be of practical interest when 1-privacy is considered adequate. Also, as a consequence of our general result for SRBPs, we obtain an improvement over the protocol of Couteau and Ros ́en for $\mathsf{AND}$ in certain cases — not in terms of the number of bits of randomness, but in terms of a simpler protocol structure (sequential, stateless).

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Foundations
Publication info
A major revision of an IACR publication in ASIACRYPT 2024
Contact author(s)
265harikrishnan @ gmail com
varunnkv @ gmail com
mp @ cse iitb ac in
vinodmp @ tifr res in
History
2024-09-18: approved
2024-09-17: received
See all versions
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2024/1448
License
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
CC BY-SA

BibTeX

@misc{cryptoeprint:2024/1448,
      author = {Hari Krishnan P. Anilkumar and Varun Narayanan and Manoj Prabhakaran and Vinod M. Prabhakaran},
      title = {Randomness in Private Sequential Stateless Protocols},
      howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2024/1448},
      year = {2024},
      url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/1448}
}
Note: In order to protect the privacy of readers, eprint.iacr.org does not use cookies or embedded third party content.