2000 results sorted by ID
Always by Your Side: Constructing Traceable Anonymous Credentials with Hardware-Binding
Chang Chen, Guoyu Yang, Qi Chen, Wei Wang, Jin Li
Applications
With the development of decentralized identity (DID), anonymous credential (AC) technology, as well as its traceability, is receiving more and more attention. Most works introduce a trusted party (regulator) that holds a decryption key or backdoor to directly deanonymize the user identity of anonymous authentication. While some cryptographic primitives can help regulators handle complex tracing tasks among large amounts of user profiles (stored by the issuer) and authentication records...
Additive Randomized Encodings from Public Key Encryption
Nir Bitansky, Saroja Erabelli, Rachit Garg
Cryptographic protocols
Introduced by Halevi, Ishai, Kushilevitz, and Rabin (CRYPTO 2023), Additive randomized encodings (ARE) reduce the computation of a $k$-party function $f(x_1,\dots,x_k)$ to locally computing encodings $\hat x_i$ of each input $x_i$ and then adding them together over some Abelian group into an output encoding $\hat y = \sum \hat x_i$, which reveals nothing but the result. The appeal of ARE comes from the simplicity of the non-local computation, involving only addition. This gives rise for...
Adaptive Hardcore Bit and Quantum Key Leasing over Classical Channel from LWE with Polynomial Modulus
Duong Hieu Phan, Weiqiang Wen, Xingyu Yan, Jinwei Zheng
Public-key cryptography
Quantum key leasing, also known as public key encryption with secure key leasing (PKE-SKL),
allows a user to lease a (quantum) secret key to a server for decryption purpose, with the capability of revoking the key afterwards.
In the pioneering work by Chardouvelis et al (arXiv:2310.14328), a PKE-SKL scheme utilizing classical channels was successfully built upon the noisy trapdoor claw-free (NTCF) family. This approach, however, relies on the superpolynomial hardness of learning with...
Non-Interactive Distributed Point Functions
Elette Boyle, Lalita Devadas, Sacha Servan-Schreiber
Cryptographic protocols
Distributed Point Functions (DPFs) are a useful cryptographic primitive enabling a dealer to distribute short keys to two parties, such that the keys encode additive secret shares of a secret point function. However, in many applications of DPFs, no single dealer entity has full knowledge of the secret point function, necessitating the parties to run an interactive protocol to emulate the setup. Prior works have aimed to minimize complexity metrics of such distributed setup protocols, e.g.,...
Multi-Key Homomorphic Secret Sharing
Geoffroy Couteau, Lalita Devadas, Aditya Hegde, Abhishek Jain, Sacha Servan-Schreiber
Cryptographic protocols
Homomorphic secret sharing (HSS) is a distributed analogue of fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) where following an input-sharing phase, two or more parties can locally compute a function over their private inputs to obtain shares of the function output.
Over the last decade, HSS schemes have been constructed from an array of different assumptions. However, all existing HSS schemes, except ones based on assumptions known to imply multi-key FHE, require a public-key infrastructure (PKI) or...
On Multi-Key FuncCPA Secure Encryption Schemes
Eri Nakajima, Keisuke Hara, Kyosuke Yamashita
Foundations
The notion of funcCPA security for homomorphic encryption schemes was introduced by Akavia \textit{et~al.}\ (TCC 2022). Whereas it aims to capture the bootstrapping technique in homomorphic encryption schemes, Dodis \textit{et~al.}\ (TCC 2023) pointed out that funcCPA security can also be applied to non-homomorphic public-key encryption schemes (PKE). As an example, they presented a use case for privacy-preserving outsourced computation without homomorphic computation. It should be noted...
Treating dishonest ciphertexts in post-quantum KEMs -- explicit vs. implicit rejection in the FO transform
Kathrin Hövelmanns, Mikhail Kudinov
Public-key cryptography
We revisit a basic building block in the endeavor to migrate to post-quantum secure cryptography, Key Encapsulation Mechanisms (KEMs). KEMs enable the establishment of a shared secret key, using only public communication. When targeting chosen-ciphertext security against quantum attackers, the go-to method is to design a Public-Key Encryption (PKE) scheme and then apply a variant of the PKE-to-KEM conversion known as the Fujisaki-Okamoto (FO) transform, which we revisit in this work....
Black-Box Registered ABE from Lattices
Ziqi Zhu, Kai Zhang, Zhili Chen, Junqing Gong, Haifeng Qian
Public-key cryptography
This paper presents the first black-box registered ABE for circuit from lattices. The selective security is based on evasive LWE assumption [EUROCRYPT'22, CRYPTO'22]. The unique prior Reg-ABE scheme from lattices is derived from non-black-box construction based on function-binding hash and witness encryption [CRYPTO'23]. Technically, we first extend the black-box registration-based encryption from standard LWE [CRYPTO'23] so that we can register a public key with a function; this yields a...
Registered ABE and Adaptively-Secure Broadcast Encryption from Succinct LWE
Jeffrey Champion, Yao-Ching Hsieh, David J. Wu
Public-key cryptography
Registered attribute-based encryption (ABE) is a generalization of public-key encryption that enables fine-grained access control to encrypted data (like standard ABE), but without needing a central trusted authority. In a key-policy registered ABE scheme, users choose their own public and private keys and then register their public keys together with a decryption policy with an (untrusted) key curator. The key curator aggregates all of the individual public keys into a short master public...
Chosen-Ciphertext Security for Inner Product FE: Multi-Client and Multi-Input, Generically
Ky Nguyen
Cryptographic protocols
Functional Encryption is a powerful cryptographic primitive that allows for fine-grained access control over encrypted data. In the multi-user setting, especially Multi-Client and Multi-Input, a plethora of works have been proposed to study on concrete function classes, improving security, and more. However, the CCA-security for such schemes is still an open problem, where the only known works are on Public-Key Single-Client FE ($\mathit{e.g.}$ Benhamouda, Bourse, and Lipmaa, PKC'17).
...
PQConnect: Automated Post-Quantum End-to-End Tunnels
Daniel J. Bernstein, Tanja Lange, Jonathan Levin, Bo-Yin Yang
Applications
This paper introduces PQConnect, a post-quantum end-to-end tunneling protocol that automatically protects all packets between clients that have installed PQConnect and servers that have installed and configured PQConnect.
Like VPNs, PQConnect does not require any changes to higher-level protocols and application software. PQConnect adds cryptographic protection to unencrypted applications, works in concert with existing pre-quantum applications to add post-quantum protection, and adds a...
Post-Quantum Privacy for Traceable Receipt-Free Encryption
Paola de Perthuis, Thomas Peters
Public-key cryptography
Traceable Receipt-free Encryption (TREnc) has recently been introduced as a verifiable public-key encryption primitive endowed with a unique security model. In a nutshell, TREnc allows randomizing ciphertexts in transit in order to remove any subliminal information up to a public trace that ensures the non-malleability of the underlying plaintext. A remarkable property of TREnc is the indistinguishability of the randomization of chosen ciphertexts against traceable chosen-ciphertext attacks...
Strongly Secure Universal Thresholdizer
Ehsan Ebrahimi, Anshu Yadav
Public-key cryptography
A universal thresholdizer (UT), constructed from a threshold fully homomorphic encryption by Boneh et. al
, Crypto 2018, is a general framework for universally thresholdizing many cryptographic schemes. However,
their framework is insufficient to construct strongly secure threshold schemes, such as threshold signatures
and threshold public-key encryption, etc.
In this paper, we strengthen the security definition for a universal thresholdizer and propose a scheme
which satisfies our...
Learning with Errors from Nonassociative Algebras
Andrew Mendelsohn, Cong Ling
Public-key cryptography
We construct a provably-secure structured variant of Learning with Errors (LWE) using nonassociative cyclic division algebras, assuming the hardness of worst-case structured lattice problems, for which we are able to give a full search-to-decision reduction, improving upon the construction of Grover et al. named `Cyclic Learning with Errors' (CLWE). We are thus able to create structured LWE over cyclic algebras without any restriction on the size of secret spaces, which was required for CLWE...
Qubit Optimized Quantum Implementation of SLIM
Hasan Ozgur Cildiroglu, Oguz Yayla
Implementation
The advent of quantum computing has profound implications for current technologies, offering advancements in optimization while posing significant threats to cryptographic algorithms. Public-key cryptosystems relying on prime factorization or discrete logarithms are particularly vulnerable, whereas block ciphers (BCs) remain secure through increased key lengths. In this study, we introduce a novel quantum implementation of SLIM, a lightweight block cipher optimized for 32-bit plaintext and...
On the Traceability of Group Signatures: Uncorrupted User Must Exist
Keita Emura
Public-key cryptography
Group signature (GS) is a well-known cryptographic primitive providing anonymity and traceability. Several implication results have been given by mainly focusing on the several security levels of anonymity, e.g., fully anonymous GS implies public key encryption (PKE) and selfless anonymous GS can be constructed from one-way functions and non-interactive zero knowledge poofs, and so on. In this paper, we explore an winning condition of full traceability: an adversary is required to produce a...
Multivariate Encryptions with LL’ perturbations - Is it possible to repair HFE in encryption? -
Jacques Patarin, Pierre Varjabedian
Public-key cryptography
We will present here new multivariate encryption algorithms. This is interesting since few multivariate encryption scheme currently exist, while their exist many more multivariate signature schemes. Our algorithms will combine several ideas, in particular the idea of the LL’ perturbation originally introduced, but only for signature, in [GP06]. In this paper, the LL’ perturbation will be used for encryption and will greatly differ from [GP06]. As we will see, our algorithms resists to all...
Bounded CCA Secure Proxy Re-encryption Based on Kyber
Shingo Sato, Junji Shikata
Public-key cryptography
Proxy re-encryption (PRE) allows semi-honest party (called proxy) to convert a ciphertext under a public key into a ciphertext under another public key. Due to this functionality, there are various applications such as encrypted email forwarding, key escrow, and securing distributed file systems. Meanwhile, post-quantum cryptography (PQC) is one of the most important research areas because development of quantum computers has been advanced recently. In particular, there are many researches...
NICE-PAKE: On the Security of KEM-Based PAKE Constructions without Ideal Ciphers
Nouri Alnahawi, Jacob Alperin-Sheriff, Daniel Apon, Alexander Wiesmaier
Cryptographic protocols
The interest in realizing generic PQC KEM-based PAKEs has increased significantly in the last few years. One such PAKE is the CAKE protocol, proposed by Beguinet et al. (ACNS ’23). However, despite its simple design based on the well-studied PAKE protocol EKE by Bellovin and Merritt (IEEE S&P ’92), both CAKE and its variant OCAKE do not fully protect against quantum adversaries, as they rely on the Ideal Cipher (IC) model. Related and follow-up works, including Pan and Zeng (ASIACRYPT ’23),...
MultiReg-FE: Registered FE for Unbounded Inner-Product and Attribute-Weighted Sums
Qiuyan Du, Qiaohan Chu, Jie Chen, Man Ho Au, Debiao He
Public-key cryptography
Recently, Francati et al. (Asiacrypt 2023) provided the first registered functional encryption (Reg-FE) beyond predicates. Reg-FE addresses the key escrow problem in functional encryption by allowing users to generate their own key pairs, effectively replacing the traditional private-key generator with a key curator. The key curator holds no secret information and runs deterministic algorithms to generate master public key for encryption and helper keys for decryption. However, existing...
On Witness Encryption and Laconic Zero-Knowledge Arguments
Yanyi Liu, Noam Mazor, Rafael Pass
Foundations
Witness encryption (WE) (Garg et al, STOC’13) is a powerful cryptographic primitive that is closely related to the notion of indistinguishability obfuscation (Barak et, JACM’12, Garg et al, FOCS’13). For a given NP-language $L$, WE for $L$ enables encrypting a message $m$ using an instance $x$ as the public-key, while ensuring that efficient decryption is possible by anyone possessing a witness for $x \in L$, and if $x\notin L$, then the encryption is hiding. We show that this seemingly...
On White-Box Learning and Public-Key Encryption
Yanyi Liu, Noam Mazor, Rafael Pass
Foundations
We consider a generalization of the Learning With Error problem, referred to as the white-box learning problem: You are given the code of a sampler that with high probability produces samples of the form $y,f(y)+\epsilon$ where is small, and $f$ is computable in polynomial-size, and the computational task consist of outputting a polynomial-size circuit $C$ that with probability, say, $1/3$ over a new sample $y$? according to the same distributions, approximates $f(y)$ (i.e., $|C(y)-f(y)$ ...
PASTA on Edge: Cryptoprocessor for Hybrid Homomorphic Encryption
Aikata Aikata, Daniel Sanz Sobrino, Sujoy Sinha Roy
Implementation
Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) enables privacy-preserving computation but imposes significant computational and communication overhead on the client for the public-key encryption. To alleviate this burden, previous works have introduced the Hybrid Homomorphic Encryption (HHE) paradigm, which combines symmetric encryption with homomorphic decryption to enhance performance for the FHE client. While early HHE schemes focused on binary data, modern versions now support integer prime fields,...
Practical Zero-Knowledge PIOP for Public Key and Ciphertext Generation in (Multi-Group) Homomorphic Encryption
Intak Hwang, Hyeonbum Lee, Jinyeong Seo, Yongsoo Song
Cryptographic protocols
Homomorphic encryption (HE) is a foundational technology in privacy-enhancing cryptography, enabling non-interactive computation over encrypted data. Recently, generalized HE primitives designed for multi-party applications, such as multi-group HE (MGHE), have gained significant research interest.
While constructing secure multi-party protocols from (MG)HE in the semi-honest model is straightforward, zero-knowledge techniques are essential for ensuring security against malicious...
Tighter Security for Group Key Agreement in the Random Oracle Model
Andreas Ellison, Karen Klein
Cryptographic protocols
The Messaging Layer Security (MLS) protocol, recently standardized in RFC 9420, aims to provide efficient asynchronous group key establishment with strong security guarantees. The main component of MLS, which is the source of its important efficiency and security properties, is a protocol called TreeKEM. Given that a major vision for the MLS protocol is for it to become the new standard for messaging applications like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, Signal, etc., it has the potential to be...
On the Black-Box Complexity of Private-Key Inner-Product Functional Encryption
Mohammad Hajiabadi, Roman Langrehr, Adam O'Neill, Mingyuan Wang
Foundations
We initiate the study of the black-box complexity of private-key functional encryption (FE). Of central importance in the private-key setting is the inner-product functionality, which is currently only known from assumptions that imply public-key encryption, such as Decisional Diffie-Hellman or Learning-with-Errors. As our main result, we rule out black-box constructions of private-key inner-product FE from random oracles. This implies a black-box separation between private-key...
Unbounded Leakage-Resilient Encryption and Signatures
Alper Çakan, Vipul Goyal
Foundations
Given the devastating security compromises caused by side-channel attacks on existing classical systems, can we store our private data encoded as a quantum state so that they can be kept private in the face of arbitrary side-channel attacks?
The unclonable nature of quantum information allows us to build various quantum protection schemes for cryptographic information such as secret keys. Examples of quantum protection notions include copy-protection, secure leasing, and finally,...
The LaZer Library: Lattice-Based Zero Knowledge and Succinct Proofs for Quantum-Safe Privacy
Vadim Lyubashevsky, Gregor Seiler, Patrick Steuer
Implementation
The hardness of lattice problems offers one of the most promising
security foundations for quantum-safe cryptography. Basic schemes
for public key encryption and digital signatures are already close to
standardization at NIST and several other standardization bodies,
and the research frontier has moved on to building primitives with
more advanced privacy features. At the core of many such primi-
tives are zero-knowledge proofs. In recent years, zero-knowledge
proofs for (and using)...
Ideal Pseudorandom Codes
Omar Alrabiah, Prabhanjan Ananth, Miranda Christ, Yevgeniy Dodis, Sam Gunn
Foundations
Pseudorandom codes are error-correcting codes with the property that no efficient adversary can distinguish encodings from uniformly random strings. They were recently introduced by Christ and Gunn [CRYPTO 2024] for the purpose of watermarking the outputs of randomized algorithms, such as generative AI models. Several constructions of pseudorandom codes have since been proposed, but none of them are robust to error channels that depend on previously seen codewords. This stronger kind of...
Anonymous Public-Key Quantum Money and Quantum Voting
Alper Çakan, Vipul Goyal, Takashi Yamakawa
Foundations
Quantum information allows us to build quantum money schemes, where a bank can issue banknotes in the form of authenticatable quantum states that cannot be cloned or counterfeited: a user in possession of k banknotes cannot produce k +1 banknotes. Similar to paper banknotes, in existing quantum money schemes, a banknote consists of an unclonable quantum state and a classical serial number, signed by bank. Thus, they lack one of the most fundamental properties cryptographers look for in a...
On the Power of Oblivious State Preparation
James Bartusek, Dakshita Khurana
Cryptographic protocols
We put forth Oblivious State Preparation (OSP) as a cryptographic primitive that unifies techniques developed in the context of a quantum server interacting with a classical client. OSP allows a classical polynomial-time sender to input a choice of one out of two public observables, and a quantum polynomial-time receiver to recover an eigenstate of the corresponding observable -- while keeping the sender's choice hidden from any malicious receiver.
We obtain the following results:
- The...
A Forgery Attack on a Code-based Signature Scheme
Ali Babaei, Taraneh Eghlidos
Attacks and cryptanalysis
With the advent of quantum computers, the security of cryptographic primitives, including digital signature schemes, has been compromised. To deal with this issue, some signature schemes have been introduced to resist against these computers. These schemes are known as post-quantum signature schemes. One group of these schemes is based on the hard problems of coding theory, called code-based cryptographic schemes. Several code-based signature schemes are inspired by the McEliece encryption...
Drifting Towards Better Error Probabilities in Fully Homomorphic Encryption Schemes
Olivier Bernard, Marc Joye, Nigel P. Smart, Michael Walter
Implementation
There are two security notions for FHE schemes the traditional notion of IND-CPA, and a more stringent notion of IND-CPA$^D$. The notions are equivalent if the FHE schemes are perfectly correct, however for schemes with negligible failure probability the FHE parameters needed to obtain IND-CPA$^D$ security can be much larger than those needed to obtain IND-CPA security. This paper uses the notion of ciphertext drift in order to understand the practical difference between IND-CPA and...
Universally Composable Non-Interactive Zero-Knowledge from Sigma Protocols via a New Straight-line Compiler
Megan Chen, Pousali Dey, Chaya Ganesh, Pratyay Mukherjee, Pratik Sarkar, Swagata Sasmal
Cryptographic protocols
Non-interactive zero-knowledge proofs (NIZK) are essential building blocks in threshold cryptosystems like multiparty signatures, distributed key generation, and verifiable secret sharing, allowing parties to prove correct behavior without revealing secrets. Furthermore, universally composable (UC) NIZKs enable seamless composition in the larger cryptosystems. A popular way to construct NIZKs is to compile interactive protocols using the Fiat-Shamir transform. Unfortunately, Fiat-Shamir...
State of the art of HFE variants Is it possible to repair HFE with appropriate perturbations?
Benoit COGLIATI, Gilles Macariot-Rat, Jacques Patarin, Pierre Varjabedian
Public-key cryptography
HFE (that stands for Hidden Field Equations) belongs to
multivariate cryptography and was designed by Jacques Patarin in 1996
as a public key trapdoor suitable for encryption or signature. This original basic version is unfortunately known to have a super-polynomial
attack, but as imagined since the beginning, it comes with various variants, one can describe as combinations of “modifiers”.
In this work, we first present the state of the art of these HFE modifiers,
along with their...
Computational Analysis of Plausibly Post-Quantum-Secure Recursive Arguments of Knowledge
Dustin Ray, Paulo L. Barreto
Implementation
With the recent standardization of post-quantum cryptographic algorithms, research efforts have largely remained centered on public key exchange and encryption schemes. Argument systems, which allow a party to efficiently argue the correctness of a computation, have received comparatively little attention regarding their quantum-resilient design. These computational integrity frameworks often rely on cryptographic assumptions, such as pairings or group operations, which are vulnerable to...
Unclonable Functional Encryption
Arthur Mehta, Anne Müller
Foundations
In a functional encryption (FE) scheme, a user that holds a ciphertext and a function-key can learn the result of applying the function to the plaintext message. Security requires that the user does not learn anything beyond the function evaluation. On the other hand, unclonable encryption (UE) is a uniquely quantum primitive, which ensures that an adversary cannot duplicate a ciphertext to decrypt the same message multiple times. In this work we introduce unclonable quantum...
Instance Compression, Revisited
Gal Arnon, Shany Ben-David, Eylon Yogev
Foundations
Collision-resistant hashing (CRH) is a cornerstone of cryptographic protocols. However, despite decades of research, no construction of a CRH based solely on one-way functions has been found. Moreover, there are black-box limitations that separate these two primitives.
Harnik and Naor [HN10] overcame this black-box barrier by introducing the notion of instance compression. Instance compression reduces large NP instances to a size that depends on their witness size while preserving the...
Simplification Issues of An Authentication and Key Agreement Scheme for Smart Grid
Zhengjun Cao, Lihua Liu
Attacks and cryptanalysis
Key agreement and public key encryption are two elementary cryptographic primitives, suitable for different scenarios. But their differences are still not familiar to some researchers. In this note, we show that the Safkhani et al.'s key agreement scheme [Peer-to-Peer Netw. Appl. 15(3), 1595-1616, 2022] is a public key encryption in disguise. We stress that the ultimate use of key agreement is to establish a shared key for some symmetric key encryption. We also present a simplification of...
Efficient Quantum Pseudorandomness from Hamiltonian Phase States
John Bostanci, Jonas Haferkamp, Dominik Hangleiter, Alexander Poremba
Foundations
Quantum pseudorandomness has found applications in many areas of quantum information, ranging from entanglement theory, to models of scrambling phenomena in chaotic quantum systems, and, more recently, in the foundations of quantum cryptography. Kretschmer (TQC '21) showed that both pseudorandom states and pseudorandom unitaries exist even in a world without classical one-way functions. To this day, however, all known constructions require classical cryptographic building blocks which are...
Fully Secure Searchable Encryption from PRFs, Pairings, and Lattices
Hirotomo Shinoki, Hisayoshi Sato, Masayuki Yoshino
Cryptographic protocols
Searchable encryption is a cryptographic primitive that allows us to perform searches on encrypted data. Searchable encryption schemes require that ciphertexts do not leak information about keywords. However, most of the existing schemes do not achieve the security notion that trapdoors do not leak information. Shen et al. (TCC 2009) proposed a security notion called full security, which includes both ciphertext privacy and trapdoor privacy, but there are few fully secure constructions. Full...
Hybrid Password Authentication Key Exchange in the UC Framework
You Lyu, Shengli Liu
Cryptographic protocols
A hybrid cryptosystem combines two systems that fulfill the same cryptographic functionality, and its security enjoys the security of the harder one. There are many proposals for hybrid public-key encryption (hybrid PKE), hybrid signature (hybrid SIG) and hybrid authenticated key exchange (hybrid AKE). In this paper, we fill the blank of Hybrid Password Authentication Key Exchange (hybrid PAKE).
For constructing hybrid PAKE, we first define an important class of PAKE -- full DH-type...
Stateful Communication with Malicious Parties
Chen-Da Liu-Zhang, Christopher Portmann, Guilherme Rito
Foundations
Cryptography's most common use is secure communication---e.g. Alice can use encryption to hide the contents of the messages she sends to Bob (confidentiality) and can use signatures to assure Bob she sent these messages (authenticity). While one typically considers stateless security guarantees---for example a channel that Alice can use to send messages securely to Bob---one can also consider stateful ones---e.g. an interactive conversation between Alice, Bob and their friends where...
A Simple Framework for Secure Key Leasing
Fuyuki Kitagawa, Tomoyuki Morimae, Takashi Yamakawa
Public-key cryptography
Secure key leasing (a.k.a. key-revocable cryptography) enables us to lease a cryptographic key as a quantum state in such a way that the key can be later revoked in a verifiable manner. We propose a simple framework for constructing cryptographic primitives with secure key leasing via the certified deletion property of BB84 states. Based on our framework, we obtain the following schemes.
- A public key encryption scheme with secure key leasing that has classical revocation based on any...
Relaxed Lattice-Based Programmable Hash Functions: New Efficient Adaptively Secure IBEs
Xingye Lu, Jingjing Fan, Man Ho AU
Public-key cryptography
In this paper, we introduce the notion of relaxed lattice-based programmable hash function (RPHF), which is a novel variant of lattice-based programmable hash functions (PHFs). Lattice-based PHFs, together with preimage trapdoor functions (TDFs), have been widely utilized (implicitly or explicitly) in the construction of adaptively secure identity-based encryption (IBE) schemes. The preimage length and the output length of the underlying PHF and TDF together determine the user secret key and...
Dishonest Majority Constant-Round MPC with Linear Communication from DDH
Vipul Goyal, Junru Li, Ankit Kumar Misra, Rafail Ostrovsky, Yifan Song, Chenkai Weng
Cryptographic protocols
In this work, we study constant round multiparty computation (MPC) for Boolean circuits against a fully malicious adversary who may control up to $n-1$ out of $n$ parties. Without relying on fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), the best-known results in this setting are achieved by Wang et al. (CCS 2017) and Hazay et al. (ASIACRYPT 2017) based on garbled circuits, which require a quadratic communication in the number of parties $O(|C|\cdot n^2)$. In contrast, for non-constant round MPC, the...
PPSA: Polynomial Private Stream Aggregation for Time-Series Data Analysis
Antonia Januszewicz, Daniela Medrano Gutierrez, Nirajan Koirala, Jiachen Zhao, Jonathan Takeshita, Jaewoo Lee, Taeho Jung
Cryptographic protocols
Modern data analytics requires computing functions on streams of data points from many users that are challenging to calculate, due to both the high scale and nontrivial nature of the computation at hand. The need for data privacy complicates this matter further, as general-purpose privacy-enhancing technologies face limitations in at least scalability or utility. Existing work has attempted to improve this by designing purpose-built protocols for the use case of Private Stream Aggregation;...
Interval Key-Encapsulation Mechanism
Alexander Bienstock, Yevgeniy Dodis, Paul Rösler, Daniel Wichs
Public-key cryptography
Forward-Secure Key-Encapsulation Mechanism (FS-KEM; Canetti et al. Eurocrypt 2003) allows Alice to encapsulate a key $k$ to Bob for some time $t$ such that Bob can decapsulate it at any time $t'\leq t$. Crucially, a corruption of Bob's secret key after time $t$ does not reveal $k$.
In this work, we generalize and extend this idea by also taking Post-Compromise Security (PCS) into account and call it Interval Key-Encapsulation Mechanism (IKEM). Thus, we do not only protect confidentiality...
On the Relationship between Public Key Primitives via Indifferentiability
Shuang Hu, Bingsheng Zhang, Cong Zhang, Kui Ren
Foundations
Recently, Masny and Rindal [MR19] formalized a notion called Endemic Oblivious Transfer (EOT), and they proposed a generic transformation from Non-Interactive Key Exchange (NIKE) to EOT with standalone security in the random oracle (RO) model. However, from the model level, the relationship between idealized NIKE and idealized EOT and the relationship between idealized elementary public key primitives have been rarely researched.
In this work, we investigate the relationship between ideal...
Public-key encryption from a trapdoor one-way embedding of $SL_2(\mathbb{N})$
Robert Hines
Public-key cryptography
We obfuscate words of a given length in a free monoid on two generators with a simple factorization algorithm (namely $SL_2(\mathbb{N})$) to create a public-key encryption scheme. We provide a reference implementation in Python and suggested parameters. The security analysis is between weak and non-existent, left to future work.
Distributed Broadcast Encryption from Lattices
Jeffrey Champion, David J. Wu
Public-key cryptography
A broadcast encryption scheme allows a user to encrypt a message to $N$ recipients with a ciphertext whose size scales sublinearly with $N$. While broadcast encryption enables succinct encrypted broadcasts, it also introduces a strong trust assumption and a single point of failure; namely, there is a central authority who generates the decryption keys for all users in the system. Distributed broadcast encryption offers an appealing alternative where there is a one-time (trusted) setup...
Circuit ABE with poly(depth, λ)-sized Ciphertexts and Keys from Lattices
Hoeteck Wee
Public-key cryptography
We present new lattice-based attribute-based encryption (ABE) and
laconic function evaluation (LFE) schemes for circuits with *sublinear*
ciphertext overhead. For depth $d$ circuits over $\ell$-bit inputs, we obtain
* an ABE with ciphertext and secret key size $O(1)$;
* a LFE with ciphertext size $\ell + O(1)$ and digest size $O(1)$;
* an ABE with public key and ciphertext size $O(\ell^{2/3})$ and
secret key size $O(1)$,
where $O(\cdot)$ hides $\mbox{poly}(d,\lambda)$...
CPA-secure KEMs are also sufficient for Post-Quantum TLS 1.3
Biming Zhou, Haodong Jiang, Yunlei Zhao
Cryptographic protocols
In the post-quantum migration of TLS 1.3, an ephemeral Diffie-Hellman must be replaced with a post-quantum key encapsulation mechanism (KEM). At EUROCRYPT 2022, Huguenin-Dumittan and Vaudenay [EC:HugVau22] demonstrated that KEMs with standard CPA security are sufficient for the security of the TLS1.3 handshake. However, their result is only proven in the random oracle model (ROM), and as the authors comment, their reduction is very much non-tight and not sufficient to guarantee security in...
ISABELLA: Improving Structures of Attribute-Based Encryption Leveraging Linear Algebra
Doreen Riepel, Marloes Venema, Tanya Verma
Public-key cryptography
Attribute-based encryption (ABE) is a powerful primitive that has found applications in important real-world settings requiring access control. Compared to traditional public-key encryption, ABE has established itself as a considerably more complex primitive that is additionally less efficient to implement. It is therefore paramount that the we can simplify the design of ABE schemes that are efficient, provide strong security guarantees, minimize the complexity in their descriptions and...
Unbalanced Private Set Union with Reduced Computation and Communication
Cong Zhang, Yu Chen, Weiran Liu, Liqiang Peng, Meng Hao, Anyu Wang, Xiaoyun Wang
Cryptographic protocols
Private set union (PSU) is a cryptographic protocol that allows two parties to compute the union of their sets without revealing anything else. Despite some efficient PSU protocols that have been proposed, they mainly focus on the balanced setting, where the sets held by the parties are of similar size. Recently, Tu et al. (CCS 2023) proposed the first unbalanced PSU protocol which achieves sublinear communication complexity in the size of the larger set.
In this paper, we are interested...
Small Public Exponent Brings More: Improved Partial Key Exposure Attacks against RSA
Yansong Feng, Abderrahmane Nitaj, Yanbin Pan
Attacks and cryptanalysis
Let $(N,e)$ be a public key of the RSA cryptosystem, and $d$ be the corresponding private key. In practice, we usually choose a small $e$ for quick encryption. In this paper, we improve partial private key exposure attacks against RSA with MSBs of $d$ and small $e$. The key idea is that under such a setting we can usually obtain more information about the prime factors of $N$ and then, by solving a univariate modular polynomial equation using Coppersmith's method, $N$ can be factored in...
Public-Key Anamorphism in (CCA-secure) Public-Key Encryption and Beyond
Giuseppe Persiano, Duong Hieu Phan, Moti Yung
Public-key cryptography
The notion of (Receiver-) Anamorphic Encryption was put forth recently to show that a dictator (i.e., an overreaching government), which demands to get the receiver’s private key and even dictates messages to the sender, cannot prevent the receiver from getting an additional covert anamorphic message from a sender. The model required an initial private collaboration to share some secret. There may be settings though where an initial collaboration may be impossible or performance-wise...
RABAEKS: Revocable Attribute-based Authenticated Encrypted Search over Lattice for Multi-receiver Cloud Storage
Yibo Cao, Shiyuan Xu, Xiu-Bo Chen, Siu-Ming Yiu
Public-key cryptography
With the widespread development of cloud storage, searching over the encrypted data (without decryption) has become a crucial issue. Public key authenticated encryption with keyword search (PAEKS) retrieves encrypted data, and resists inside keyword guessing attacks (IKGAs). Most PAEKS schemes cannot support access control in multi-receiver models. To address this concern, attribute-based authenticated encryption with keyword search (ABAEKS) has been studied. However, the access privilege...
Don't Trust Setup! New Directions in Pre-Constrained Cryptography
Shweta Agrawal, Simran Kumari, Ryo Nishimaki
Public-key cryptography
The recent works of Ananth et al. (ITCS 2022) and Bartusek et al. (Eurocrypt 2023) initiated the study of pre-constrained cryptography which achieves meaningful security even against the system authority. In this work we significantly expand this area by defining several new primitives and providing constructions from simple, standard assumptions as follows.
- Pre-Constrained Encryption. We define a weaker notion of pre-constrained encryption (PCE), as compared to the work of Ananth et...
NTRU+PKE: Efficient Public-Key Encryption Schemes from the NTRU Problem
Jonghyun Kim, Jong Hwan Park
Public-key cryptography
We propose a new NTRU-based Public-Key Encryption (PKE) scheme called $\mathsf{NTRU+}\mathsf{PKE}$, which effectively incorporates the Fujisaki-Okamoto transformation for PKE (denoted as $\mathsf{FO}_{\mathsf{PKE}}$) to achieve chosen-ciphertext security in the Quantum Random Oracle Model (QROM). While $\mathsf{NTRUEncrypt}$, a first-round candidate in the NIST PQC standardization process, was proven to be chosen-ciphertext secure in the Random Oracle Model (ROM), it lacked corresponding...
Count Corruptions, Not Users: Improved Tightness for Signatures, Encryption and Authenticated Key Exchange
Mihir Bellare, Doreen Riepel, Stefano Tessaro, Yizhao Zhang
Public-key cryptography
In the multi-user with corruptions (muc) setting there are $n\geq 1$ users, and the goal is to prove that, even in the face of an adversary that adaptively corrupts users to expose their keys, un-corrupted users retain security. This can be considered for many primitives including signatures and encryption. Proofs of muc security, while possible, generally suffer a factor n loss in tightness, which can be large. This paper gives new proofs where this factor is reduced to the number c of...
Non-Interactive Zero-Knowledge from LPN and MQ
Quang Dao, Aayush Jain, Zhengzhong Jin
Cryptographic protocols
We give the first construction of non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) arguments from post-quantum assumptions other than Learning with Errors. In particular, we achieve NIZK under the polynomial hardness of the Learning Parity with Noise (LPN) assumption, and the exponential hardness of solving random under-determined multivariate quadratic equations (MQ). We also construct NIZK satisfying statistical zero-knowledge assuming a new variant of LPN, Dense-Sparse LPN, introduced by Dao and...
A short-list of pairing-friendly curves resistant to the Special TNFS algorithm at the 192-bit security level
Diego F. Aranha, Georgios Fotiadis, Aurore Guillevic
Implementation
For more than two decades, pairings have been a fundamental tool for designing elegant cryptosystems, varying from digital signature schemes to more complex privacy-preserving constructions. However, the advancement of quantum computing threatens to undermine public-key cryptography. Concretely, it is widely accepted that a future large-scale quantum computer would be capable to break any public-key cryptosystem used today, rendering today's public-key cryptography obsolete and mandating the...
Bounded-Collusion Streaming Functional Encryption from Minimal Assumptions
Kaartik Bhushan, Alexis Korb, Amit Sahai
Public-key cryptography
Streaming functional encryption (sFE), recently introduced by Guan, Korb, and Sahai [Crypto 2023], is an extension of functional encryption (FE) tailored for iterative computation on dynamic data streams. Unlike in regular FE, in an sFE scheme, users can encrypt and compute on the data as soon as it becomes available and in time proportional to just the size of the newly arrived data.
As sFE implies regular FE, all known constructions of sFE and FE for $\mathsf{P/Poly}$ require strong...
Inner Product Ring LWE Problem, Reduction, New Trapdoor Algorithm for Inner Product Ring LWE Problem and Ring SIS Problem
Zhuang Shan, Leyou Zhang, Qing Wu, Qiqi Lai
Foundations
Lattice cryptography is currently a major research focus in public-key encryption, renowned for its ability to resist quantum attacks. The introduction of ideal lattices (ring lattices) has elevated the theoretical framework of lattice cryptography. Ideal lattice cryptography, compared to classical lattice cryptography, achieves more acceptable operational efficiency through fast Fourier transforms. However, to date, issues of impracticality or insecurity persist in ideal lattice problems....
On the Relationship between FuncCPA and FuncCPA+
Takumi Shinozaki, Keisuke Tanaka, Masayuki Tezuka, Yusuke Yoshida
Public-key cryptography
Akavia, Gentry, Halevi, and Vald introduced the security notion of function-chosen-plaintext-attack (FuncCPA security) for public-key encryption schemes.
FuncCPA is defined by adding a functional re-encryption oracle to the IND-CPA game.
This notion is crucial for secure computation applications where the server is allowed to delegate a part of the computation to the client.
Dodis, Halevi, and Wichs introduced a stronger variant called FuncCPA$^+$.
They showed FuncCPA$^+$ implies...
Practical Traceable Receipt-Free Encryption
Henri Devillez, Olivier Pereira, Thomas Peters
Public-key cryptography
Traceable Receipt-free Encryption (TREnc) is a verifiable public-key encryption primitive introduced at Asiacrypt 2022. A TREnc allows randomizing ciphertexts in transit in order to remove any subliminal information up to a public trace that ensures the non-malleability of the underlying plaintext. A remarkable property of TREnc is the indistinguishability of the randomization of chosen ciphertexts against traceable chosen-ciphertext attacks (TCCA). This property can support applications...
Designated-Verifier zk-SNARKs Made Easy
Chen Li, Fangguo Zhang
Cryptographic protocols
Zero-knowledge succinct non-interactive argument of knowledge (zk-SNARK) is a kind of proof system that enables a prover to convince a verifier that an NP statement is true efficiently. In the last decade, various studies made a lot of progress in constructing more efficient and secure zk-SNARKs. Our research focuses on designated-verifier zk-SNARKs, where only the verifier knowing some secret verification state can be convinced by the proof. A natural idea of getting a designated-verifier...
Shared-Custodial Password-Authenticated Deterministic Wallets
Poulami Das, Andreas Erwig, Sebastian Faust
Cryptographic protocols
Cryptographic wallets are an essential tool in Blockchain networks to ensure the secure storage and maintenance of an user's cryptographic keys. Broadly, wallets can be divided into three categories, namely custodial, non-custodial, and shared-custodial wallets. The first two are centralized solutions, i.e., the wallet is operated by a single entity, which inherently introduces a single point of failure. Shared-custodial wallets, on the other hand, are maintained by two independent parties,...
Limits of Black-Box Anamorphic Encryption
Dario Catalano, Emanuele Giunta, Francesco Migliaro
Public-key cryptography
(Receiver) Anamorphic encryption, introduced by Persiano $ \textit{et al.}$ at Eurocrypt 2022, considers the question of achieving private communication in a world where secret decryption keys are under the control of a dictator. The challenge here is to be able to establish a secret communication channel to exchange covert (i.e. anamorphic) messages on top of some already deployed public key encryption scheme.
Over the last few years several works addressed this challenge by showing...
The Cost of Maintaining Keys in Dynamic Groups with Applications to Multicast Encryption and Group Messaging
Michael Anastos, Benedikt Auerbach, Mirza Ahad Baig, Miguel Cueto Noval, Matthew Kwan, Guillermo Pascual-Perez, Krzysztof Pietrzak
Cryptographic protocols
In this work we prove lower bounds on the (communication) cost of maintaining a shared key among a dynamic group of users.
Being "dynamic'' means one can add and remove users from the group.
This captures important protocols like multicast encryption (ME) and continuous group-key agreement (CGKA), which is the primitive underlying many group messaging applications.
We prove our bounds in a combinatorial setting where the state of the protocol progresses in rounds.
The state of the...
Separating Selective Opening Security From Standard Security, Assuming IO
Justin Holmgren, Brent Waters
Foundations
Assuming the hardness of LWE and the existence of IO, we construct a public-key encryption scheme that is IND-CCA secure but fails to satisfy even a weak notion of indistinguishability security with respect to selective opening attacks. Prior to our work, such a separation was known only from stronger assumptions such as differing inputs obfuscation (Hofheinz, Rao, and Wichs, PKC 2016).
Central to our separation is a new hash family, which may be of independent interest. Specifically,...
On Sequential Functions and Fine-Grained Cryptography
Jiaxin Guan, Hart Montgomery
Foundations
A sequential function is, informally speaking, a function $f$ for which a massively parallel adversary cannot compute "substantially" faster than an honest user with limited parallel computation power. Sequential functions form the backbone of many primitives that are extensively used in blockchains such as verifiable delay functions (VDFs) and time-lock puzzles. Despite this widespread practical use, there has been little work studying the complexity or theory of sequential...
Leveled Homomorphic Encryption Schemes for Homomorphic Encryption Standard
Shuhong Gao, Kyle Yates
Foundations
Homomorphic encryption allows for computations on encrypted data without exposing the underlying plaintext, enabling secure and private data processing in various applications such as cloud computing and machine learning. This paper presents a comprehensive mathematical foundation for three prominent homomorphic encryption schemes: Brakerski-Gentry-Vaikuntanathan (BGV), Brakerski-Fan-Vercauteren (BFV), and Cheon-Kim-Kim-Song (CKKS), all based on the Ring Learning with Errors (RLWE) problem....
Designs for practical SHE schemes based on Ring-LWR
Madalina Bolboceanu, Anamaria Costache, Erin Hales, Rachel Player, Miruna Rosca, Radu Titiu
Public-key cryptography
The Learning with Errors problem (LWE) and its variants are among the most popular assumptions underlying lattice-based cryptography. The Learning with Rounding problem (LWR) can be thought of as a deterministic variant of LWE. While lattice-based cryptography is known to enable many advanced constructions, constructing Fully Homomorphic Encryption schemes based on LWR remains an under-explored part of the literature. In this work, we present a thorough study of Somewhat Homomorphic...
Quantum CCA-Secure PKE, Revisited
Navid Alamati, Varun Maram
Public-key cryptography
Security against chosen-ciphertext attacks (CCA) concerns privacy of messages even if the adversary has access to the decryption oracle. While the classical notion of CCA security seems to be strong enough to capture many attack scenarios, it falls short of preserving the privacy of messages in the presence of quantum decryption queries, i.e., when an adversary can query a superposition of ciphertexts.
Boneh and Zhandry (CRYPTO 2013) defined the notion of quantum CCA (qCCA) security to...
Unbounded Non-Zero Inner Product Encryption
Bishnu Charan Behera, Somindu C. Ramanna
Cryptographic protocols
In a non-zero inner product encryption (NIPE) scheme, ciphertexts and keys are associated with vectors from some inner-product space. Decryption of a ciphertext for $\vec{x}$ is allowed by a key for $\vec{y}$ if and only if the inner product $\langle{\vec{x}},{\vec{y}}\rangle \neq 0$.
Existing constructions of NIPE assume the length of the vectors are fixed apriori.
We present the first constructions of $ unbounded $ non-zero inner product encryption (UNIPE) with constant sized keys....
Laconic Function Evaluation and ABE for RAMs from (Ring-)LWE
Fangqi Dong, Zihan Hao, Ethan Mook, Hoeteck Wee, Daniel Wichs
Public-key cryptography
Laconic function evaluation (LFE) allows us to compress a circuit $f$ into a short digest. Anybody can use this digest as a public-key to efficiently encrypt some input $x$. Decrypting the resulting ciphertext reveals the output $f(x)$, while hiding everything else about $x$. In this work we consider LFE for Random-Access Machines (RAM-LFE) where, instead of a circuit $f$, we have a RAM program $f_{\mathsf{DB}}$ that potentially contains some large hard-coded data $\mathsf{DB}$. The...
Distributed Asynchronous Remote Key Generation
Mark Manulis, Hugo Nartz
Cryptographic protocols
Asynchronous Remote Key Generation (ARKG) is a primitive introduced by Frymann et al. at ACM CCS 2020. It enables a sender to generate a new public key $pk'$ for a receiver ensuring only it can, at a later time, compute the corresponding private key $sk'$. These key pairs are indistinguishable from freshly generated ones and can be used in various public-key cryptosystems such as digital signatures and public-key encryption. ARKG has been explored for applications in WebAuthn credential...
Formally verifying Kyber Episode V: Machine-checked IND-CCA security and correctness of ML-KEM in EasyCrypt
José Bacelar Almeida, Santiago Arranz Olmos, Manuel Barbosa, Gilles Barthe, François Dupressoir, Benjamin Grégoire, Vincent Laporte, Jean-Christophe Léchenet, Cameron Low, Tiago Oliveira, Hugo Pacheco, Miguel Quaresma, Peter Schwabe, Pierre-Yves Strub
Public-key cryptography
We present a formally verified proof of the correctness and IND-CCA security of ML-KEM, the Kyber-based Key Encapsulation Mechanism (KEM) undergoing standardization by NIST.
The proof is machine-checked in EasyCrypt and it includes:
1) A formalization of the correctness (decryption failure probability) and IND-CPA security of the Kyber base public-key encryption scheme, following Bos et al. at Euro S&P 2018;
2) A formalization of the relevant variant of the Fujisaki-Okamoto transform in...
Provable security against decryption failure attacks from LWE
Christian Majenz, Fabrizio Sisinni
Public-key cryptography
In a recent work, Hövelmanns, Hülsing and Majenz introduced a new security proof for the Fujisaki-Okamoto transform in the quantum-accessible random oracle model (QROM) used in post-quantum key encapsulation mechanisms. While having a smaller security loss due to decryption failures present in many constructions, it requires two new security properties of the underlying public-key encryption scheme (PKE).
In this work, we show that one of the properties, Find Failing Plaintexts - Non...
How (not) to Build Quantum PKE in Minicrypt
Longcheng Li, Qian Li, Xingjian Li, Qipeng Liu
Foundations
The seminal work by Impagliazzo and Rudich (STOC'89) demonstrated the impossibility of constructing classical public key encryption (PKE) from one-way functions (OWF) in a black-box manner. However, the question remains: can quantum PKE (QPKE) be constructed from quantumly secure OWF?
A recent line of work has shown that it is indeed possible to build QPKE from OWF, but with one caveat --- they rely on quantum public keys, which cannot be authenticated and reused. In this work, we...
A General Framework for Lattice-Based ABE Using Evasive Inner-Product Functional Encryption
Yao-Ching Hsieh, Huijia Lin, Ji Luo
Public-key cryptography
We present a general framework for constructing attribute-based encryption (ABE) schemes for arbitrary function class based on lattices from two ingredients, i) a noisy linear secret sharing scheme for the class and ii) a new type of inner-product functional encryption (IPFE) scheme, termed *evasive* IPFE, which we introduce in this work. We propose lattice-based evasive IPFE schemes and establish their security under simple conditions based on variants of evasive learning with errors (LWE)...
Detecting Rogue Decryption in (Threshold) Encryption via Self-Incriminating Proofs
James Hsin-yu Chiang, Bernardo David, Tore Kasper Frederiksen, Arup Mondal, Esra Yeniaras
Public-key cryptography
Keeping decrypting parties accountable in public key encryption is notoriously hard since the secret key owner can decrypt any arbitrary ciphertext. Threshold encryption aims to solve this issue by distributing the power to decrypt among a set of parties, who must interact via a decryption protocol. However, such parties can employ cryptographic tools such as Multiparty Computation (MPC) to decrypt arbitrary ciphertexts without being detected. We introduce the notion of (threshold)...
Measure-Rewind-Extract: Tighter Proofs of One-Way to Hiding and CCA Security in the Quantum Random Oracle Model
Jiangxia Ge, Heming Liao, Rui Xue
Public-key cryptography
The One-Way to Hiding (O2H) theorem, first given by Unruh (J ACM 2015) and then restated by Ambainis et al. (CRYPTO 2019), is a crucial technique for solving the reprogramming problem in the quantum random oracle model (QROM). It provides an upper bound $d\cdot\sqrt{\epsilon}$ for the distinguisher's advantage, where $d$ is the query depth and $\epsilon$ denotes the advantage of a one-wayness attacker. Later, in order to obtain a tighter upper bound, Kuchta et al. (EUROCRYPT 2020) proposed...
Constant-Cost Batched Partial Decryption in Threshold Encryption
Sora Suegami, Shinsaku Ashizawa, Kyohei Shibano
Cryptographic protocols
Threshold public key encryption schemes distribute secret keys among multiple parties, known as the committee, to reduce reliance on a single trusted entity.
However, existing schemes face inefficiencies as the committee should perform computation and communication for decryption of each individual ciphertext.
As the number of ciphertexts being decrypted per unit of time increases, this can limit the number of committee parties and their decentralization due to increased hardware...
Lattice-based Broadcast Authenticated Searchable Encryption for Cloud Storage
Yibo Cao, Shiyuan Xu, Xiu-Bo Chen, Gang Xu, Siu-Ming Yiu, Zongpeng Li
Public-key cryptography
For security issue, data in cloud is encrypted. Searching encrypted data (without decryption) is a practical and important problem. Public key authenticated encryption with keyword search (PAEKS) enables the retrieval of encrypted data, while resisting the insider keyword guessing attacks (IKGAs). Most PAEKS schemes only work with single-receiver model, exhibiting very limited applicability. To address this concern, there have been researches on broadcast authenticated encryption with...
Reducing the CRS Size in Registered ABE Systems
Rachit Garg, George Lu, Brent Waters, David J. Wu
Public-key cryptography
Attribute-based encryption (ABE) is a generalization of public-key encryption that enables fine-grained access control to encrypted data. In (ciphertext-policy) ABE, a central trusted authority issues decryption keys for attributes $x$ to users. In turn, ciphertexts are associated with a decryption policy $\mathcal{P}$. Decryption succeeds and recovers the encrypted message whenever $\mathcal{P}(x) = 1$. Recently, Hohenberger, Lu, Waters, and Wu (Eurocrypt 2023) introduced the notion of...
Multi-Client Functional Encryption with Public Inputs and Strong Security
Ky Nguyen, Duong Hieu Phan, David Pointcheval
Public-key cryptography
Recent years have witnessed a significant development for functional encryption (FE) in the multi-user setting, particularly with multi-client functional encryption (MCFE). The challenge becomes more important when combined with access control, such as attribute-based encryption (ABE), which was actually not covered syntactically by the public-key FE nor semantically by the secret-key MCFE frameworks. On the other hand, as for complex primitives, many works have studied the admissibility of...
Quantum Key-Revocable Dual-Regev Encryption, Revisited
Prabhanjan Ananth, Zihan Hu, Zikuan Huang
Foundations
Quantum information can be used to achieve novel cryptographic primitives that are impossible to achieve classically. A recent work by Ananth, Poremba, Vaikuntanathan (TCC 2023) focuses on equipping the dual-Regev encryption scheme, introduced by Gentry, Peikert, Vaikuntanathan (STOC 2008), with key revocation capabilities using quantum information. They further showed that the key-revocable dual-Regev scheme implies the existence of fully homomorphic encryption and pseudorandom functions,...
Secure Multiparty Computation in the Presence of Covert Adaptive Adversaries
Isheeta Nargis, Anwar Hasan
Cryptographic protocols
We design a new MPC protocol for arithmetic circuits secure against erasure-free covert adaptive adversaries with deterrence 1/2. The new MPC protocol has the same asymptotic communication cost, the number of PKE operations and the number of exponentiation operations as the most efficient MPC protocol for arithmetic circuits secure against covert static adversaries. That means, the new MPC protocol improves security from covert static security to covert adaptive adversary almost for free....
Compact Encryption based on Module-NTRU problems
Shi Bai, Hansraj Jangir, Hao Lin, Tran Ngo, Weiqiang Wen, Jinwei Zheng
Public-key cryptography
The Module-NTRU problem, introduced by Cheon, Kim,
Kim, Son (IACR ePrint 2019/1468), and Chuengsatiansup, Prest, Stehlé,
Wallet, Xagawa (ASIACCS ’20), generalizes the versatile NTRU assump-
tion. One of its main advantages lies in its ability to offer greater flexibil-
ity on parameters, such as the underlying ring dimension. In this work,
we present several lattice-based encryption schemes, which are IND-CPA
(or OW-CPA) secure in the standard model based on the Module-NTRU
and...
Let Attackers Program Ideal Models: Modularity and Composability for Adaptive Compromise
Joseph Jaeger
Foundations
We show that the adaptive compromise security definitions of Jaeger and Tyagi (Crypto '20) cannot be applied in several natural use-cases. These include proving multi-user security from single-user security, the security of the cascade PRF, and the security of schemes sharing the same ideal primitive. We provide new variants of the definitions and show that they resolve these issues with composition. Extending these definitions to the asymmetric settings, we establish the security of the...
An Efficient All-to-All GCD Algorithm for Low Entropy RSA Key Factorization
Elijah Pelofske
Attacks and cryptanalysis
RSA is an incredibly successful and useful asymmetric encryption algorithm. One of the types of implementation flaws in RSA is low entropy of the key generation, specifically the prime number creation stage. This can occur due to flawed usage of random prime number generator libraries, or on computers where there is a lack of a source of external entropy. These implementation flaws result in some RSA keys sharing prime factors, which means that the full factorization of the public modulus...
Agile, Post-quantum Secure Cryptography in Avionics
Karolin Varner, Wanja Zaeske, Sven Friedrich, Aaron Kaiser, Alice Bowman
Cryptographic protocols
To introduce a post-quantum-secure encryption scheme specifically for use in flight-computers, we used avionics’ module-isolation methods to wrap a recent encryption standard (HPKE – Hybrid Public Key Encryption) within a software partition. This solution proposes an upgrade to HPKE, using quantum-resistant ciphers (Kyber/ML-KEM and Dilithium/ML-DSA) redundantly alongside well-established ciphers, to achieve post-quantum security.
Because cryptographic technology can suddenly become...
MUSEN: Aggregatable Key-Evolving Verifiable Random Functions and Applications
Bernardo David, Rafael Dowsley, Anders Konring, Mario Larangeira
Cryptographic protocols
A Verifiable Random Function (VRF) can be evaluated on an input by a prover who holds a secret key, generating a pseudorandom output and a proof of output validity that can be verified using the corresponding public key. VRFs are a central building block of committee election mechanisms that sample parties to execute tasks in cryptographic protocols, e.g. generating blocks in a Proof-of-Stake (PoS) blockchain or executing a round of MPC protocols. We propose the notion, and a matching...
The Case of Small Prime Numbers Versus the Okamoto-Uchiyama Cryptosystem
George Teseleanu
Public-key cryptography
In this paper we study the effect of using small prime numbers within the Okamoto-Uchiyama public key encryption scheme. We introduce two novel versions and prove their security. Then we show how to choose the system's parameters such that the security results hold. Moreover, we provide a practical comparison between the cryptographic algorithms we introduced and the original Okamoto-Uchiyama cryptosystem.
LIT-SiGamal: An efficient isogeny-based PKE based on a LIT diagram
Tomoki Moriya
Public-key cryptography
In this paper, we propose a novel isogeny-based public key encryption (PKE) scheme named LIT-SiGamal. This is based on a LIT diagram and SiGamal. SiGamal is an isogeny-based PKE scheme that uses a commutative diagram with an auxiliary point. LIT-SiGamal uses a LIT diagram which is a commutative diagram consisting of large-degree horizontal isogenies and relatively small-degree vertical isogenies, while the original SiGamal uses a CSIDH diagram.
A strength of LIT-SiGamal is efficient...
CCA Secure Updatable Encryption from Non-Mappable Group Actions
Jonas Meers, Doreen Riepel
Cryptographic protocols
Ciphertext-independent updatable encryption (UE) allows to rotate encryption keys and update ciphertexts via a token without the need to first download the ciphertexts. Although, syntactically, UE is a symmetric-key primitive, ciphertext-independent UE with forward secrecy and post-compromise security is known to imply public-key encryption (Alamati, Montgomery and Patranabis, CRYPTO 2019).
Constructing post-quantum secure UE turns out to be a difficult task. While lattices offer the...
SILBE: an Updatable Public Key Encryption Scheme from Lollipop Attacks
Max Duparc, Tako Boris Fouotsa, Serge Vaudenay
Public-key cryptography
We present a new post-quantum Public Key Encryption scheme (PKE) named Supersingular Isogeny Lollipop Based Encryption or SILBE. SILBE is obtained by leveraging the generalised lollipop attack of Castryck and Vercauteren on the M-SIDH Key exchange by Fouotsa, Moriya and Petit.
Doing so, we can in fact make SILBE a post-quantum secure Updatable Public Key Encryption scheme (UPKE). SILBE is in fact the first isogeny-based UPKE which is not based on group actions. Hence, SILBE overcomes the...
With the development of decentralized identity (DID), anonymous credential (AC) technology, as well as its traceability, is receiving more and more attention. Most works introduce a trusted party (regulator) that holds a decryption key or backdoor to directly deanonymize the user identity of anonymous authentication. While some cryptographic primitives can help regulators handle complex tracing tasks among large amounts of user profiles (stored by the issuer) and authentication records...
Introduced by Halevi, Ishai, Kushilevitz, and Rabin (CRYPTO 2023), Additive randomized encodings (ARE) reduce the computation of a $k$-party function $f(x_1,\dots,x_k)$ to locally computing encodings $\hat x_i$ of each input $x_i$ and then adding them together over some Abelian group into an output encoding $\hat y = \sum \hat x_i$, which reveals nothing but the result. The appeal of ARE comes from the simplicity of the non-local computation, involving only addition. This gives rise for...
Quantum key leasing, also known as public key encryption with secure key leasing (PKE-SKL), allows a user to lease a (quantum) secret key to a server for decryption purpose, with the capability of revoking the key afterwards. In the pioneering work by Chardouvelis et al (arXiv:2310.14328), a PKE-SKL scheme utilizing classical channels was successfully built upon the noisy trapdoor claw-free (NTCF) family. This approach, however, relies on the superpolynomial hardness of learning with...
Distributed Point Functions (DPFs) are a useful cryptographic primitive enabling a dealer to distribute short keys to two parties, such that the keys encode additive secret shares of a secret point function. However, in many applications of DPFs, no single dealer entity has full knowledge of the secret point function, necessitating the parties to run an interactive protocol to emulate the setup. Prior works have aimed to minimize complexity metrics of such distributed setup protocols, e.g.,...
Homomorphic secret sharing (HSS) is a distributed analogue of fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) where following an input-sharing phase, two or more parties can locally compute a function over their private inputs to obtain shares of the function output. Over the last decade, HSS schemes have been constructed from an array of different assumptions. However, all existing HSS schemes, except ones based on assumptions known to imply multi-key FHE, require a public-key infrastructure (PKI) or...
The notion of funcCPA security for homomorphic encryption schemes was introduced by Akavia \textit{et~al.}\ (TCC 2022). Whereas it aims to capture the bootstrapping technique in homomorphic encryption schemes, Dodis \textit{et~al.}\ (TCC 2023) pointed out that funcCPA security can also be applied to non-homomorphic public-key encryption schemes (PKE). As an example, they presented a use case for privacy-preserving outsourced computation without homomorphic computation. It should be noted...
We revisit a basic building block in the endeavor to migrate to post-quantum secure cryptography, Key Encapsulation Mechanisms (KEMs). KEMs enable the establishment of a shared secret key, using only public communication. When targeting chosen-ciphertext security against quantum attackers, the go-to method is to design a Public-Key Encryption (PKE) scheme and then apply a variant of the PKE-to-KEM conversion known as the Fujisaki-Okamoto (FO) transform, which we revisit in this work....
This paper presents the first black-box registered ABE for circuit from lattices. The selective security is based on evasive LWE assumption [EUROCRYPT'22, CRYPTO'22]. The unique prior Reg-ABE scheme from lattices is derived from non-black-box construction based on function-binding hash and witness encryption [CRYPTO'23]. Technically, we first extend the black-box registration-based encryption from standard LWE [CRYPTO'23] so that we can register a public key with a function; this yields a...
Registered attribute-based encryption (ABE) is a generalization of public-key encryption that enables fine-grained access control to encrypted data (like standard ABE), but without needing a central trusted authority. In a key-policy registered ABE scheme, users choose their own public and private keys and then register their public keys together with a decryption policy with an (untrusted) key curator. The key curator aggregates all of the individual public keys into a short master public...
Functional Encryption is a powerful cryptographic primitive that allows for fine-grained access control over encrypted data. In the multi-user setting, especially Multi-Client and Multi-Input, a plethora of works have been proposed to study on concrete function classes, improving security, and more. However, the CCA-security for such schemes is still an open problem, where the only known works are on Public-Key Single-Client FE ($\mathit{e.g.}$ Benhamouda, Bourse, and Lipmaa, PKC'17). ...
This paper introduces PQConnect, a post-quantum end-to-end tunneling protocol that automatically protects all packets between clients that have installed PQConnect and servers that have installed and configured PQConnect. Like VPNs, PQConnect does not require any changes to higher-level protocols and application software. PQConnect adds cryptographic protection to unencrypted applications, works in concert with existing pre-quantum applications to add post-quantum protection, and adds a...
Traceable Receipt-free Encryption (TREnc) has recently been introduced as a verifiable public-key encryption primitive endowed with a unique security model. In a nutshell, TREnc allows randomizing ciphertexts in transit in order to remove any subliminal information up to a public trace that ensures the non-malleability of the underlying plaintext. A remarkable property of TREnc is the indistinguishability of the randomization of chosen ciphertexts against traceable chosen-ciphertext attacks...
A universal thresholdizer (UT), constructed from a threshold fully homomorphic encryption by Boneh et. al , Crypto 2018, is a general framework for universally thresholdizing many cryptographic schemes. However, their framework is insufficient to construct strongly secure threshold schemes, such as threshold signatures and threshold public-key encryption, etc. In this paper, we strengthen the security definition for a universal thresholdizer and propose a scheme which satisfies our...
We construct a provably-secure structured variant of Learning with Errors (LWE) using nonassociative cyclic division algebras, assuming the hardness of worst-case structured lattice problems, for which we are able to give a full search-to-decision reduction, improving upon the construction of Grover et al. named `Cyclic Learning with Errors' (CLWE). We are thus able to create structured LWE over cyclic algebras without any restriction on the size of secret spaces, which was required for CLWE...
The advent of quantum computing has profound implications for current technologies, offering advancements in optimization while posing significant threats to cryptographic algorithms. Public-key cryptosystems relying on prime factorization or discrete logarithms are particularly vulnerable, whereas block ciphers (BCs) remain secure through increased key lengths. In this study, we introduce a novel quantum implementation of SLIM, a lightweight block cipher optimized for 32-bit plaintext and...
Group signature (GS) is a well-known cryptographic primitive providing anonymity and traceability. Several implication results have been given by mainly focusing on the several security levels of anonymity, e.g., fully anonymous GS implies public key encryption (PKE) and selfless anonymous GS can be constructed from one-way functions and non-interactive zero knowledge poofs, and so on. In this paper, we explore an winning condition of full traceability: an adversary is required to produce a...
We will present here new multivariate encryption algorithms. This is interesting since few multivariate encryption scheme currently exist, while their exist many more multivariate signature schemes. Our algorithms will combine several ideas, in particular the idea of the LL’ perturbation originally introduced, but only for signature, in [GP06]. In this paper, the LL’ perturbation will be used for encryption and will greatly differ from [GP06]. As we will see, our algorithms resists to all...
Proxy re-encryption (PRE) allows semi-honest party (called proxy) to convert a ciphertext under a public key into a ciphertext under another public key. Due to this functionality, there are various applications such as encrypted email forwarding, key escrow, and securing distributed file systems. Meanwhile, post-quantum cryptography (PQC) is one of the most important research areas because development of quantum computers has been advanced recently. In particular, there are many researches...
The interest in realizing generic PQC KEM-based PAKEs has increased significantly in the last few years. One such PAKE is the CAKE protocol, proposed by Beguinet et al. (ACNS ’23). However, despite its simple design based on the well-studied PAKE protocol EKE by Bellovin and Merritt (IEEE S&P ’92), both CAKE and its variant OCAKE do not fully protect against quantum adversaries, as they rely on the Ideal Cipher (IC) model. Related and follow-up works, including Pan and Zeng (ASIACRYPT ’23),...
Recently, Francati et al. (Asiacrypt 2023) provided the first registered functional encryption (Reg-FE) beyond predicates. Reg-FE addresses the key escrow problem in functional encryption by allowing users to generate their own key pairs, effectively replacing the traditional private-key generator with a key curator. The key curator holds no secret information and runs deterministic algorithms to generate master public key for encryption and helper keys for decryption. However, existing...
Witness encryption (WE) (Garg et al, STOC’13) is a powerful cryptographic primitive that is closely related to the notion of indistinguishability obfuscation (Barak et, JACM’12, Garg et al, FOCS’13). For a given NP-language $L$, WE for $L$ enables encrypting a message $m$ using an instance $x$ as the public-key, while ensuring that efficient decryption is possible by anyone possessing a witness for $x \in L$, and if $x\notin L$, then the encryption is hiding. We show that this seemingly...
We consider a generalization of the Learning With Error problem, referred to as the white-box learning problem: You are given the code of a sampler that with high probability produces samples of the form $y,f(y)+\epsilon$ where is small, and $f$ is computable in polynomial-size, and the computational task consist of outputting a polynomial-size circuit $C$ that with probability, say, $1/3$ over a new sample $y$? according to the same distributions, approximates $f(y)$ (i.e., $|C(y)-f(y)$ ...
Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) enables privacy-preserving computation but imposes significant computational and communication overhead on the client for the public-key encryption. To alleviate this burden, previous works have introduced the Hybrid Homomorphic Encryption (HHE) paradigm, which combines symmetric encryption with homomorphic decryption to enhance performance for the FHE client. While early HHE schemes focused on binary data, modern versions now support integer prime fields,...
Homomorphic encryption (HE) is a foundational technology in privacy-enhancing cryptography, enabling non-interactive computation over encrypted data. Recently, generalized HE primitives designed for multi-party applications, such as multi-group HE (MGHE), have gained significant research interest. While constructing secure multi-party protocols from (MG)HE in the semi-honest model is straightforward, zero-knowledge techniques are essential for ensuring security against malicious...
The Messaging Layer Security (MLS) protocol, recently standardized in RFC 9420, aims to provide efficient asynchronous group key establishment with strong security guarantees. The main component of MLS, which is the source of its important efficiency and security properties, is a protocol called TreeKEM. Given that a major vision for the MLS protocol is for it to become the new standard for messaging applications like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, Signal, etc., it has the potential to be...
We initiate the study of the black-box complexity of private-key functional encryption (FE). Of central importance in the private-key setting is the inner-product functionality, which is currently only known from assumptions that imply public-key encryption, such as Decisional Diffie-Hellman or Learning-with-Errors. As our main result, we rule out black-box constructions of private-key inner-product FE from random oracles. This implies a black-box separation between private-key...
Given the devastating security compromises caused by side-channel attacks on existing classical systems, can we store our private data encoded as a quantum state so that they can be kept private in the face of arbitrary side-channel attacks? The unclonable nature of quantum information allows us to build various quantum protection schemes for cryptographic information such as secret keys. Examples of quantum protection notions include copy-protection, secure leasing, and finally,...
The hardness of lattice problems offers one of the most promising security foundations for quantum-safe cryptography. Basic schemes for public key encryption and digital signatures are already close to standardization at NIST and several other standardization bodies, and the research frontier has moved on to building primitives with more advanced privacy features. At the core of many such primi- tives are zero-knowledge proofs. In recent years, zero-knowledge proofs for (and using)...
Pseudorandom codes are error-correcting codes with the property that no efficient adversary can distinguish encodings from uniformly random strings. They were recently introduced by Christ and Gunn [CRYPTO 2024] for the purpose of watermarking the outputs of randomized algorithms, such as generative AI models. Several constructions of pseudorandom codes have since been proposed, but none of them are robust to error channels that depend on previously seen codewords. This stronger kind of...
Quantum information allows us to build quantum money schemes, where a bank can issue banknotes in the form of authenticatable quantum states that cannot be cloned or counterfeited: a user in possession of k banknotes cannot produce k +1 banknotes. Similar to paper banknotes, in existing quantum money schemes, a banknote consists of an unclonable quantum state and a classical serial number, signed by bank. Thus, they lack one of the most fundamental properties cryptographers look for in a...
We put forth Oblivious State Preparation (OSP) as a cryptographic primitive that unifies techniques developed in the context of a quantum server interacting with a classical client. OSP allows a classical polynomial-time sender to input a choice of one out of two public observables, and a quantum polynomial-time receiver to recover an eigenstate of the corresponding observable -- while keeping the sender's choice hidden from any malicious receiver. We obtain the following results: - The...
With the advent of quantum computers, the security of cryptographic primitives, including digital signature schemes, has been compromised. To deal with this issue, some signature schemes have been introduced to resist against these computers. These schemes are known as post-quantum signature schemes. One group of these schemes is based on the hard problems of coding theory, called code-based cryptographic schemes. Several code-based signature schemes are inspired by the McEliece encryption...
There are two security notions for FHE schemes the traditional notion of IND-CPA, and a more stringent notion of IND-CPA$^D$. The notions are equivalent if the FHE schemes are perfectly correct, however for schemes with negligible failure probability the FHE parameters needed to obtain IND-CPA$^D$ security can be much larger than those needed to obtain IND-CPA security. This paper uses the notion of ciphertext drift in order to understand the practical difference between IND-CPA and...
Non-interactive zero-knowledge proofs (NIZK) are essential building blocks in threshold cryptosystems like multiparty signatures, distributed key generation, and verifiable secret sharing, allowing parties to prove correct behavior without revealing secrets. Furthermore, universally composable (UC) NIZKs enable seamless composition in the larger cryptosystems. A popular way to construct NIZKs is to compile interactive protocols using the Fiat-Shamir transform. Unfortunately, Fiat-Shamir...
HFE (that stands for Hidden Field Equations) belongs to multivariate cryptography and was designed by Jacques Patarin in 1996 as a public key trapdoor suitable for encryption or signature. This original basic version is unfortunately known to have a super-polynomial attack, but as imagined since the beginning, it comes with various variants, one can describe as combinations of “modifiers”. In this work, we first present the state of the art of these HFE modifiers, along with their...
With the recent standardization of post-quantum cryptographic algorithms, research efforts have largely remained centered on public key exchange and encryption schemes. Argument systems, which allow a party to efficiently argue the correctness of a computation, have received comparatively little attention regarding their quantum-resilient design. These computational integrity frameworks often rely on cryptographic assumptions, such as pairings or group operations, which are vulnerable to...
In a functional encryption (FE) scheme, a user that holds a ciphertext and a function-key can learn the result of applying the function to the plaintext message. Security requires that the user does not learn anything beyond the function evaluation. On the other hand, unclonable encryption (UE) is a uniquely quantum primitive, which ensures that an adversary cannot duplicate a ciphertext to decrypt the same message multiple times. In this work we introduce unclonable quantum...
Collision-resistant hashing (CRH) is a cornerstone of cryptographic protocols. However, despite decades of research, no construction of a CRH based solely on one-way functions has been found. Moreover, there are black-box limitations that separate these two primitives. Harnik and Naor [HN10] overcame this black-box barrier by introducing the notion of instance compression. Instance compression reduces large NP instances to a size that depends on their witness size while preserving the...
Key agreement and public key encryption are two elementary cryptographic primitives, suitable for different scenarios. But their differences are still not familiar to some researchers. In this note, we show that the Safkhani et al.'s key agreement scheme [Peer-to-Peer Netw. Appl. 15(3), 1595-1616, 2022] is a public key encryption in disguise. We stress that the ultimate use of key agreement is to establish a shared key for some symmetric key encryption. We also present a simplification of...
Quantum pseudorandomness has found applications in many areas of quantum information, ranging from entanglement theory, to models of scrambling phenomena in chaotic quantum systems, and, more recently, in the foundations of quantum cryptography. Kretschmer (TQC '21) showed that both pseudorandom states and pseudorandom unitaries exist even in a world without classical one-way functions. To this day, however, all known constructions require classical cryptographic building blocks which are...
Searchable encryption is a cryptographic primitive that allows us to perform searches on encrypted data. Searchable encryption schemes require that ciphertexts do not leak information about keywords. However, most of the existing schemes do not achieve the security notion that trapdoors do not leak information. Shen et al. (TCC 2009) proposed a security notion called full security, which includes both ciphertext privacy and trapdoor privacy, but there are few fully secure constructions. Full...
A hybrid cryptosystem combines two systems that fulfill the same cryptographic functionality, and its security enjoys the security of the harder one. There are many proposals for hybrid public-key encryption (hybrid PKE), hybrid signature (hybrid SIG) and hybrid authenticated key exchange (hybrid AKE). In this paper, we fill the blank of Hybrid Password Authentication Key Exchange (hybrid PAKE). For constructing hybrid PAKE, we first define an important class of PAKE -- full DH-type...
Cryptography's most common use is secure communication---e.g. Alice can use encryption to hide the contents of the messages she sends to Bob (confidentiality) and can use signatures to assure Bob she sent these messages (authenticity). While one typically considers stateless security guarantees---for example a channel that Alice can use to send messages securely to Bob---one can also consider stateful ones---e.g. an interactive conversation between Alice, Bob and their friends where...
Secure key leasing (a.k.a. key-revocable cryptography) enables us to lease a cryptographic key as a quantum state in such a way that the key can be later revoked in a verifiable manner. We propose a simple framework for constructing cryptographic primitives with secure key leasing via the certified deletion property of BB84 states. Based on our framework, we obtain the following schemes. - A public key encryption scheme with secure key leasing that has classical revocation based on any...
In this paper, we introduce the notion of relaxed lattice-based programmable hash function (RPHF), which is a novel variant of lattice-based programmable hash functions (PHFs). Lattice-based PHFs, together with preimage trapdoor functions (TDFs), have been widely utilized (implicitly or explicitly) in the construction of adaptively secure identity-based encryption (IBE) schemes. The preimage length and the output length of the underlying PHF and TDF together determine the user secret key and...
In this work, we study constant round multiparty computation (MPC) for Boolean circuits against a fully malicious adversary who may control up to $n-1$ out of $n$ parties. Without relying on fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), the best-known results in this setting are achieved by Wang et al. (CCS 2017) and Hazay et al. (ASIACRYPT 2017) based on garbled circuits, which require a quadratic communication in the number of parties $O(|C|\cdot n^2)$. In contrast, for non-constant round MPC, the...
Modern data analytics requires computing functions on streams of data points from many users that are challenging to calculate, due to both the high scale and nontrivial nature of the computation at hand. The need for data privacy complicates this matter further, as general-purpose privacy-enhancing technologies face limitations in at least scalability or utility. Existing work has attempted to improve this by designing purpose-built protocols for the use case of Private Stream Aggregation;...
Forward-Secure Key-Encapsulation Mechanism (FS-KEM; Canetti et al. Eurocrypt 2003) allows Alice to encapsulate a key $k$ to Bob for some time $t$ such that Bob can decapsulate it at any time $t'\leq t$. Crucially, a corruption of Bob's secret key after time $t$ does not reveal $k$. In this work, we generalize and extend this idea by also taking Post-Compromise Security (PCS) into account and call it Interval Key-Encapsulation Mechanism (IKEM). Thus, we do not only protect confidentiality...
Recently, Masny and Rindal [MR19] formalized a notion called Endemic Oblivious Transfer (EOT), and they proposed a generic transformation from Non-Interactive Key Exchange (NIKE) to EOT with standalone security in the random oracle (RO) model. However, from the model level, the relationship between idealized NIKE and idealized EOT and the relationship between idealized elementary public key primitives have been rarely researched. In this work, we investigate the relationship between ideal...
We obfuscate words of a given length in a free monoid on two generators with a simple factorization algorithm (namely $SL_2(\mathbb{N})$) to create a public-key encryption scheme. We provide a reference implementation in Python and suggested parameters. The security analysis is between weak and non-existent, left to future work.
A broadcast encryption scheme allows a user to encrypt a message to $N$ recipients with a ciphertext whose size scales sublinearly with $N$. While broadcast encryption enables succinct encrypted broadcasts, it also introduces a strong trust assumption and a single point of failure; namely, there is a central authority who generates the decryption keys for all users in the system. Distributed broadcast encryption offers an appealing alternative where there is a one-time (trusted) setup...
We present new lattice-based attribute-based encryption (ABE) and laconic function evaluation (LFE) schemes for circuits with *sublinear* ciphertext overhead. For depth $d$ circuits over $\ell$-bit inputs, we obtain * an ABE with ciphertext and secret key size $O(1)$; * a LFE with ciphertext size $\ell + O(1)$ and digest size $O(1)$; * an ABE with public key and ciphertext size $O(\ell^{2/3})$ and secret key size $O(1)$, where $O(\cdot)$ hides $\mbox{poly}(d,\lambda)$...
In the post-quantum migration of TLS 1.3, an ephemeral Diffie-Hellman must be replaced with a post-quantum key encapsulation mechanism (KEM). At EUROCRYPT 2022, Huguenin-Dumittan and Vaudenay [EC:HugVau22] demonstrated that KEMs with standard CPA security are sufficient for the security of the TLS1.3 handshake. However, their result is only proven in the random oracle model (ROM), and as the authors comment, their reduction is very much non-tight and not sufficient to guarantee security in...
Attribute-based encryption (ABE) is a powerful primitive that has found applications in important real-world settings requiring access control. Compared to traditional public-key encryption, ABE has established itself as a considerably more complex primitive that is additionally less efficient to implement. It is therefore paramount that the we can simplify the design of ABE schemes that are efficient, provide strong security guarantees, minimize the complexity in their descriptions and...
Private set union (PSU) is a cryptographic protocol that allows two parties to compute the union of their sets without revealing anything else. Despite some efficient PSU protocols that have been proposed, they mainly focus on the balanced setting, where the sets held by the parties are of similar size. Recently, Tu et al. (CCS 2023) proposed the first unbalanced PSU protocol which achieves sublinear communication complexity in the size of the larger set. In this paper, we are interested...
Let $(N,e)$ be a public key of the RSA cryptosystem, and $d$ be the corresponding private key. In practice, we usually choose a small $e$ for quick encryption. In this paper, we improve partial private key exposure attacks against RSA with MSBs of $d$ and small $e$. The key idea is that under such a setting we can usually obtain more information about the prime factors of $N$ and then, by solving a univariate modular polynomial equation using Coppersmith's method, $N$ can be factored in...
The notion of (Receiver-) Anamorphic Encryption was put forth recently to show that a dictator (i.e., an overreaching government), which demands to get the receiver’s private key and even dictates messages to the sender, cannot prevent the receiver from getting an additional covert anamorphic message from a sender. The model required an initial private collaboration to share some secret. There may be settings though where an initial collaboration may be impossible or performance-wise...
With the widespread development of cloud storage, searching over the encrypted data (without decryption) has become a crucial issue. Public key authenticated encryption with keyword search (PAEKS) retrieves encrypted data, and resists inside keyword guessing attacks (IKGAs). Most PAEKS schemes cannot support access control in multi-receiver models. To address this concern, attribute-based authenticated encryption with keyword search (ABAEKS) has been studied. However, the access privilege...
The recent works of Ananth et al. (ITCS 2022) and Bartusek et al. (Eurocrypt 2023) initiated the study of pre-constrained cryptography which achieves meaningful security even against the system authority. In this work we significantly expand this area by defining several new primitives and providing constructions from simple, standard assumptions as follows. - Pre-Constrained Encryption. We define a weaker notion of pre-constrained encryption (PCE), as compared to the work of Ananth et...
We propose a new NTRU-based Public-Key Encryption (PKE) scheme called $\mathsf{NTRU+}\mathsf{PKE}$, which effectively incorporates the Fujisaki-Okamoto transformation for PKE (denoted as $\mathsf{FO}_{\mathsf{PKE}}$) to achieve chosen-ciphertext security in the Quantum Random Oracle Model (QROM). While $\mathsf{NTRUEncrypt}$, a first-round candidate in the NIST PQC standardization process, was proven to be chosen-ciphertext secure in the Random Oracle Model (ROM), it lacked corresponding...
In the multi-user with corruptions (muc) setting there are $n\geq 1$ users, and the goal is to prove that, even in the face of an adversary that adaptively corrupts users to expose their keys, un-corrupted users retain security. This can be considered for many primitives including signatures and encryption. Proofs of muc security, while possible, generally suffer a factor n loss in tightness, which can be large. This paper gives new proofs where this factor is reduced to the number c of...
We give the first construction of non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) arguments from post-quantum assumptions other than Learning with Errors. In particular, we achieve NIZK under the polynomial hardness of the Learning Parity with Noise (LPN) assumption, and the exponential hardness of solving random under-determined multivariate quadratic equations (MQ). We also construct NIZK satisfying statistical zero-knowledge assuming a new variant of LPN, Dense-Sparse LPN, introduced by Dao and...
For more than two decades, pairings have been a fundamental tool for designing elegant cryptosystems, varying from digital signature schemes to more complex privacy-preserving constructions. However, the advancement of quantum computing threatens to undermine public-key cryptography. Concretely, it is widely accepted that a future large-scale quantum computer would be capable to break any public-key cryptosystem used today, rendering today's public-key cryptography obsolete and mandating the...
Streaming functional encryption (sFE), recently introduced by Guan, Korb, and Sahai [Crypto 2023], is an extension of functional encryption (FE) tailored for iterative computation on dynamic data streams. Unlike in regular FE, in an sFE scheme, users can encrypt and compute on the data as soon as it becomes available and in time proportional to just the size of the newly arrived data. As sFE implies regular FE, all known constructions of sFE and FE for $\mathsf{P/Poly}$ require strong...
Lattice cryptography is currently a major research focus in public-key encryption, renowned for its ability to resist quantum attacks. The introduction of ideal lattices (ring lattices) has elevated the theoretical framework of lattice cryptography. Ideal lattice cryptography, compared to classical lattice cryptography, achieves more acceptable operational efficiency through fast Fourier transforms. However, to date, issues of impracticality or insecurity persist in ideal lattice problems....
Akavia, Gentry, Halevi, and Vald introduced the security notion of function-chosen-plaintext-attack (FuncCPA security) for public-key encryption schemes. FuncCPA is defined by adding a functional re-encryption oracle to the IND-CPA game. This notion is crucial for secure computation applications where the server is allowed to delegate a part of the computation to the client. Dodis, Halevi, and Wichs introduced a stronger variant called FuncCPA$^+$. They showed FuncCPA$^+$ implies...
Traceable Receipt-free Encryption (TREnc) is a verifiable public-key encryption primitive introduced at Asiacrypt 2022. A TREnc allows randomizing ciphertexts in transit in order to remove any subliminal information up to a public trace that ensures the non-malleability of the underlying plaintext. A remarkable property of TREnc is the indistinguishability of the randomization of chosen ciphertexts against traceable chosen-ciphertext attacks (TCCA). This property can support applications...
Zero-knowledge succinct non-interactive argument of knowledge (zk-SNARK) is a kind of proof system that enables a prover to convince a verifier that an NP statement is true efficiently. In the last decade, various studies made a lot of progress in constructing more efficient and secure zk-SNARKs. Our research focuses on designated-verifier zk-SNARKs, where only the verifier knowing some secret verification state can be convinced by the proof. A natural idea of getting a designated-verifier...
Cryptographic wallets are an essential tool in Blockchain networks to ensure the secure storage and maintenance of an user's cryptographic keys. Broadly, wallets can be divided into three categories, namely custodial, non-custodial, and shared-custodial wallets. The first two are centralized solutions, i.e., the wallet is operated by a single entity, which inherently introduces a single point of failure. Shared-custodial wallets, on the other hand, are maintained by two independent parties,...
(Receiver) Anamorphic encryption, introduced by Persiano $ \textit{et al.}$ at Eurocrypt 2022, considers the question of achieving private communication in a world where secret decryption keys are under the control of a dictator. The challenge here is to be able to establish a secret communication channel to exchange covert (i.e. anamorphic) messages on top of some already deployed public key encryption scheme. Over the last few years several works addressed this challenge by showing...
In this work we prove lower bounds on the (communication) cost of maintaining a shared key among a dynamic group of users. Being "dynamic'' means one can add and remove users from the group. This captures important protocols like multicast encryption (ME) and continuous group-key agreement (CGKA), which is the primitive underlying many group messaging applications. We prove our bounds in a combinatorial setting where the state of the protocol progresses in rounds. The state of the...
Assuming the hardness of LWE and the existence of IO, we construct a public-key encryption scheme that is IND-CCA secure but fails to satisfy even a weak notion of indistinguishability security with respect to selective opening attacks. Prior to our work, such a separation was known only from stronger assumptions such as differing inputs obfuscation (Hofheinz, Rao, and Wichs, PKC 2016). Central to our separation is a new hash family, which may be of independent interest. Specifically,...
A sequential function is, informally speaking, a function $f$ for which a massively parallel adversary cannot compute "substantially" faster than an honest user with limited parallel computation power. Sequential functions form the backbone of many primitives that are extensively used in blockchains such as verifiable delay functions (VDFs) and time-lock puzzles. Despite this widespread practical use, there has been little work studying the complexity or theory of sequential...
Homomorphic encryption allows for computations on encrypted data without exposing the underlying plaintext, enabling secure and private data processing in various applications such as cloud computing and machine learning. This paper presents a comprehensive mathematical foundation for three prominent homomorphic encryption schemes: Brakerski-Gentry-Vaikuntanathan (BGV), Brakerski-Fan-Vercauteren (BFV), and Cheon-Kim-Kim-Song (CKKS), all based on the Ring Learning with Errors (RLWE) problem....
The Learning with Errors problem (LWE) and its variants are among the most popular assumptions underlying lattice-based cryptography. The Learning with Rounding problem (LWR) can be thought of as a deterministic variant of LWE. While lattice-based cryptography is known to enable many advanced constructions, constructing Fully Homomorphic Encryption schemes based on LWR remains an under-explored part of the literature. In this work, we present a thorough study of Somewhat Homomorphic...
Security against chosen-ciphertext attacks (CCA) concerns privacy of messages even if the adversary has access to the decryption oracle. While the classical notion of CCA security seems to be strong enough to capture many attack scenarios, it falls short of preserving the privacy of messages in the presence of quantum decryption queries, i.e., when an adversary can query a superposition of ciphertexts. Boneh and Zhandry (CRYPTO 2013) defined the notion of quantum CCA (qCCA) security to...
In a non-zero inner product encryption (NIPE) scheme, ciphertexts and keys are associated with vectors from some inner-product space. Decryption of a ciphertext for $\vec{x}$ is allowed by a key for $\vec{y}$ if and only if the inner product $\langle{\vec{x}},{\vec{y}}\rangle \neq 0$. Existing constructions of NIPE assume the length of the vectors are fixed apriori. We present the first constructions of $ unbounded $ non-zero inner product encryption (UNIPE) with constant sized keys....
Laconic function evaluation (LFE) allows us to compress a circuit $f$ into a short digest. Anybody can use this digest as a public-key to efficiently encrypt some input $x$. Decrypting the resulting ciphertext reveals the output $f(x)$, while hiding everything else about $x$. In this work we consider LFE for Random-Access Machines (RAM-LFE) where, instead of a circuit $f$, we have a RAM program $f_{\mathsf{DB}}$ that potentially contains some large hard-coded data $\mathsf{DB}$. The...
Asynchronous Remote Key Generation (ARKG) is a primitive introduced by Frymann et al. at ACM CCS 2020. It enables a sender to generate a new public key $pk'$ for a receiver ensuring only it can, at a later time, compute the corresponding private key $sk'$. These key pairs are indistinguishable from freshly generated ones and can be used in various public-key cryptosystems such as digital signatures and public-key encryption. ARKG has been explored for applications in WebAuthn credential...
We present a formally verified proof of the correctness and IND-CCA security of ML-KEM, the Kyber-based Key Encapsulation Mechanism (KEM) undergoing standardization by NIST. The proof is machine-checked in EasyCrypt and it includes: 1) A formalization of the correctness (decryption failure probability) and IND-CPA security of the Kyber base public-key encryption scheme, following Bos et al. at Euro S&P 2018; 2) A formalization of the relevant variant of the Fujisaki-Okamoto transform in...
In a recent work, Hövelmanns, Hülsing and Majenz introduced a new security proof for the Fujisaki-Okamoto transform in the quantum-accessible random oracle model (QROM) used in post-quantum key encapsulation mechanisms. While having a smaller security loss due to decryption failures present in many constructions, it requires two new security properties of the underlying public-key encryption scheme (PKE). In this work, we show that one of the properties, Find Failing Plaintexts - Non...
The seminal work by Impagliazzo and Rudich (STOC'89) demonstrated the impossibility of constructing classical public key encryption (PKE) from one-way functions (OWF) in a black-box manner. However, the question remains: can quantum PKE (QPKE) be constructed from quantumly secure OWF? A recent line of work has shown that it is indeed possible to build QPKE from OWF, but with one caveat --- they rely on quantum public keys, which cannot be authenticated and reused. In this work, we...
We present a general framework for constructing attribute-based encryption (ABE) schemes for arbitrary function class based on lattices from two ingredients, i) a noisy linear secret sharing scheme for the class and ii) a new type of inner-product functional encryption (IPFE) scheme, termed *evasive* IPFE, which we introduce in this work. We propose lattice-based evasive IPFE schemes and establish their security under simple conditions based on variants of evasive learning with errors (LWE)...
Keeping decrypting parties accountable in public key encryption is notoriously hard since the secret key owner can decrypt any arbitrary ciphertext. Threshold encryption aims to solve this issue by distributing the power to decrypt among a set of parties, who must interact via a decryption protocol. However, such parties can employ cryptographic tools such as Multiparty Computation (MPC) to decrypt arbitrary ciphertexts without being detected. We introduce the notion of (threshold)...
The One-Way to Hiding (O2H) theorem, first given by Unruh (J ACM 2015) and then restated by Ambainis et al. (CRYPTO 2019), is a crucial technique for solving the reprogramming problem in the quantum random oracle model (QROM). It provides an upper bound $d\cdot\sqrt{\epsilon}$ for the distinguisher's advantage, where $d$ is the query depth and $\epsilon$ denotes the advantage of a one-wayness attacker. Later, in order to obtain a tighter upper bound, Kuchta et al. (EUROCRYPT 2020) proposed...
Threshold public key encryption schemes distribute secret keys among multiple parties, known as the committee, to reduce reliance on a single trusted entity. However, existing schemes face inefficiencies as the committee should perform computation and communication for decryption of each individual ciphertext. As the number of ciphertexts being decrypted per unit of time increases, this can limit the number of committee parties and their decentralization due to increased hardware...
For security issue, data in cloud is encrypted. Searching encrypted data (without decryption) is a practical and important problem. Public key authenticated encryption with keyword search (PAEKS) enables the retrieval of encrypted data, while resisting the insider keyword guessing attacks (IKGAs). Most PAEKS schemes only work with single-receiver model, exhibiting very limited applicability. To address this concern, there have been researches on broadcast authenticated encryption with...
Attribute-based encryption (ABE) is a generalization of public-key encryption that enables fine-grained access control to encrypted data. In (ciphertext-policy) ABE, a central trusted authority issues decryption keys for attributes $x$ to users. In turn, ciphertexts are associated with a decryption policy $\mathcal{P}$. Decryption succeeds and recovers the encrypted message whenever $\mathcal{P}(x) = 1$. Recently, Hohenberger, Lu, Waters, and Wu (Eurocrypt 2023) introduced the notion of...
Recent years have witnessed a significant development for functional encryption (FE) in the multi-user setting, particularly with multi-client functional encryption (MCFE). The challenge becomes more important when combined with access control, such as attribute-based encryption (ABE), which was actually not covered syntactically by the public-key FE nor semantically by the secret-key MCFE frameworks. On the other hand, as for complex primitives, many works have studied the admissibility of...
Quantum information can be used to achieve novel cryptographic primitives that are impossible to achieve classically. A recent work by Ananth, Poremba, Vaikuntanathan (TCC 2023) focuses on equipping the dual-Regev encryption scheme, introduced by Gentry, Peikert, Vaikuntanathan (STOC 2008), with key revocation capabilities using quantum information. They further showed that the key-revocable dual-Regev scheme implies the existence of fully homomorphic encryption and pseudorandom functions,...
We design a new MPC protocol for arithmetic circuits secure against erasure-free covert adaptive adversaries with deterrence 1/2. The new MPC protocol has the same asymptotic communication cost, the number of PKE operations and the number of exponentiation operations as the most efficient MPC protocol for arithmetic circuits secure against covert static adversaries. That means, the new MPC protocol improves security from covert static security to covert adaptive adversary almost for free....
The Module-NTRU problem, introduced by Cheon, Kim, Kim, Son (IACR ePrint 2019/1468), and Chuengsatiansup, Prest, Stehlé, Wallet, Xagawa (ASIACCS ’20), generalizes the versatile NTRU assump- tion. One of its main advantages lies in its ability to offer greater flexibil- ity on parameters, such as the underlying ring dimension. In this work, we present several lattice-based encryption schemes, which are IND-CPA (or OW-CPA) secure in the standard model based on the Module-NTRU and...
We show that the adaptive compromise security definitions of Jaeger and Tyagi (Crypto '20) cannot be applied in several natural use-cases. These include proving multi-user security from single-user security, the security of the cascade PRF, and the security of schemes sharing the same ideal primitive. We provide new variants of the definitions and show that they resolve these issues with composition. Extending these definitions to the asymmetric settings, we establish the security of the...
RSA is an incredibly successful and useful asymmetric encryption algorithm. One of the types of implementation flaws in RSA is low entropy of the key generation, specifically the prime number creation stage. This can occur due to flawed usage of random prime number generator libraries, or on computers where there is a lack of a source of external entropy. These implementation flaws result in some RSA keys sharing prime factors, which means that the full factorization of the public modulus...
To introduce a post-quantum-secure encryption scheme specifically for use in flight-computers, we used avionics’ module-isolation methods to wrap a recent encryption standard (HPKE – Hybrid Public Key Encryption) within a software partition. This solution proposes an upgrade to HPKE, using quantum-resistant ciphers (Kyber/ML-KEM and Dilithium/ML-DSA) redundantly alongside well-established ciphers, to achieve post-quantum security. Because cryptographic technology can suddenly become...
A Verifiable Random Function (VRF) can be evaluated on an input by a prover who holds a secret key, generating a pseudorandom output and a proof of output validity that can be verified using the corresponding public key. VRFs are a central building block of committee election mechanisms that sample parties to execute tasks in cryptographic protocols, e.g. generating blocks in a Proof-of-Stake (PoS) blockchain or executing a round of MPC protocols. We propose the notion, and a matching...
In this paper we study the effect of using small prime numbers within the Okamoto-Uchiyama public key encryption scheme. We introduce two novel versions and prove their security. Then we show how to choose the system's parameters such that the security results hold. Moreover, we provide a practical comparison between the cryptographic algorithms we introduced and the original Okamoto-Uchiyama cryptosystem.
In this paper, we propose a novel isogeny-based public key encryption (PKE) scheme named LIT-SiGamal. This is based on a LIT diagram and SiGamal. SiGamal is an isogeny-based PKE scheme that uses a commutative diagram with an auxiliary point. LIT-SiGamal uses a LIT diagram which is a commutative diagram consisting of large-degree horizontal isogenies and relatively small-degree vertical isogenies, while the original SiGamal uses a CSIDH diagram. A strength of LIT-SiGamal is efficient...
Ciphertext-independent updatable encryption (UE) allows to rotate encryption keys and update ciphertexts via a token without the need to first download the ciphertexts. Although, syntactically, UE is a symmetric-key primitive, ciphertext-independent UE with forward secrecy and post-compromise security is known to imply public-key encryption (Alamati, Montgomery and Patranabis, CRYPTO 2019). Constructing post-quantum secure UE turns out to be a difficult task. While lattices offer the...
We present a new post-quantum Public Key Encryption scheme (PKE) named Supersingular Isogeny Lollipop Based Encryption or SILBE. SILBE is obtained by leveraging the generalised lollipop attack of Castryck and Vercauteren on the M-SIDH Key exchange by Fouotsa, Moriya and Petit. Doing so, we can in fact make SILBE a post-quantum secure Updatable Public Key Encryption scheme (UPKE). SILBE is in fact the first isogeny-based UPKE which is not based on group actions. Hence, SILBE overcomes the...