13,000 research outputs found
Delegatable Anonymous Credentials
We construct an efficient delegatable anonymous credential system. Users can anonymously and unlinkably obtain credentials from any authority, delegate their credentials to other users, and prove possession of a credential levels away from the given authority. The size of the proof (and time to compute it) is , where is the security parameter. The only other construction of delegatable anonymous credentials (Chase and Lysyanskaya, Crypto 2006) relies on general non-interactive proofs for NP-complete languages of size .
We revise the entire approach to constructing anonymous credentials
and identify \emph{randomizable} zero-knowledge proof of knowledge
systems as the key building block. We formally define the notion of
randomizable non-interactive zero-knowledge proofs, and give the first construction by showing how to appropriately rerandomize Groth and Sahai (Eurocrypt 2008) proofs. We show that such proof systems, in combination with an appropriate authentication scheme and a few other protocols, allow us to construct delegatable anonymous credentials. Finally, we instantiate these building blocks under appropriate assumptions about groups with bilinear maps
Deterministic-Prover Zero-Knowledge Proofs
Zero-knowledge proof systems enable a prover to convince a verifier of the
validity of a statement without revealing anything beyond that fact. The role
of randomness in interactive proofs in general, and in zero-knowledge in
particular, is well known. In particular, zero-knowledge with a deterministic
verifier is impossible for non-trivial languages (outside of
). Likewise, it was shown by Goldreich and Oren (Journal of
Cryptology, 1994) that zero-knowledge with a deterministic prover is also
impossible for non-trivial languages. However, their proof holds only for
auxiliary-input zero knowledge and a malicious verifier.
In this paper, we initiate the study of the feasibility of zero-knowledge
proof systems with a deterministic prover in settings not covered by the
result of Goldreich and Oren. We prove the existence of deterministic-prover
auxiliary-input honest-verifier zero-knowledge for any
language, under standard assumptions. In addition, we show that any language
with a hash proof system has a deterministic-prover honest-verifier
statistical zero-knowledge proof, with an efficient prover. Finally, we show
that in some cases, it is even possible to achieve deterministic-prover
uniform zero-knowledge for a malicious verifier.
Our contribution is primarily conceptual, and sheds light on the necessity of
randomness in zero knowledge in settings where either the verifier is honest
or there is no auxiliary input
Concurrent Knowledge-Extraction in the Public-Key Model
Knowledge extraction is a fundamental notion, modelling machine possession of
values (witnesses) in a computational complexity sense. The notion provides an
essential tool for cryptographic protocol design and analysis, enabling one to
argue about the internal state of protocol players without ever looking at this
supposedly secret state. However, when transactions are concurrent (e.g., over
the Internet) with players possessing public-keys (as is common in
cryptography), assuring that entities ``know'' what they claim to know, where
adversaries may be well coordinated across different transactions, turns out to
be much more subtle and in need of re-examination. Here, we investigate how to
formally treat knowledge possession by parties (with registered public-keys)
interacting over the Internet. Stated more technically, we look into the
relative power of the notion of ``concurrent knowledge-extraction'' (CKE) in
the concurrent zero-knowledge (CZK) bare public-key (BPK) model.Comment: 38 pages, 4 figure
Concurrently Non-Malleable Zero Knowledge in the Authenticated Public-Key Model
We consider a type of zero-knowledge protocols that are of interest for their
practical applications within networks like the Internet: efficient
zero-knowledge arguments of knowledge that remain secure against concurrent
man-in-the-middle attacks. In an effort to reduce the setup assumptions
required for efficient zero-knowledge arguments of knowledge that remain secure
against concurrent man-in-the-middle attacks, we consider a model, which we
call the Authenticated Public-Key (APK) model. The APK model seems to
significantly reduce the setup assumptions made by the CRS model (as no trusted
party or honest execution of a centralized algorithm are required), and can be
seen as a slightly stronger variation of the Bare Public-Key (BPK) model from
\cite{CGGM,MR}, and a weaker variation of the registered public-key model used
in \cite{BCNP}. We then define and study man-in-the-middle attacks in the APK
model. Our main result is a constant-round concurrent non-malleable
zero-knowledge argument of knowledge for any polynomial-time relation
(associated to a language in ), under the (minimal) assumption of
the existence of a one-way function family. Furthermore,We show time-efficient
instantiations of our protocol based on known number-theoretic assumptions. We
also note a negative result with respect to further reducing the setup
assumptions of our protocol to those in the (unauthenticated) BPK model, by
showing that concurrently non-malleable zero-knowledge arguments of knowledge
in the BPK model are only possible for trivial languages
On Constant-Round Concurrent Zero-Knowledge from a Knowledge Assumption
In this work, we consider the long-standing open question of constructing
constant-round concurrent zero-knowledge protocols in the plain model.
Resolving this question is known to require non-black-box techniques.
We consider non-black-box techniques for zero-knowledge based on knowledge
assumptions, a line of thinking initiated by the work of Hada and Tanaka
(CRYPTO 1998). Prior to our work, it was not known whether knowledge
assumptions could be used for achieving security in the concurrent setting, due
to a number of significant limitations that we discuss here. Nevertheless, we
obtain the following results:
1. We obtain the first constant round concurrent zero-knowledge argument for
\textbf{NP} in the plain model based on a new variant of knowledge of exponent
assumption. Furthermore, our construction avoids the inefficiency inherent in
previous non-black-box techniques such that those of Barak (FOCS 2001); we
obtain our result through an efficient protocol compiler.
2. Unlike Hada and Tanaka, we do not require a knowledge assumption to argue
the soundness of our protocol. Instead, we use a discrete log like assumption,
which we call Diffie-Hellman Logarithm Assumption, to prove the soundness of
our protocol.
3. We give evidence that our new variant of knowledge of exponent assumption
is in fact plausible. In particular, we show that our assumption holds in the
generic group model.
4. Knowledge assumptions are especially delicate assumptions whose
plausibility may be hard to gauge. We give a novel framework to express
knowledge assumptions in a more flexible way, which may allow for formulation
of plausible assumptions and exploration of their impact and application in
cryptography.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figure
Predictable arguments of knowledge
We initiate a formal investigation on the power of predictability for argument of knowledge systems for NP. Specifically, we consider private-coin argument systems where the answer of the prover can be predicted, given the private randomness of the verifier; we call such protocols Predictable Arguments of Knowledge (PAoK).
Our study encompasses a full characterization of PAoK, showing that such arguments can be made extremely laconic, with the prover sending a single bit, and assumed to have only one round (i.e., two messages) of communication without loss of generality.
We additionally explore PAoK satisfying additional properties (including zero-knowledge and the possibility of re-using the same challenge across multiple executions with the prover), present several constructions of PAoK relying on different cryptographic tools, and discuss applications to cryptography
Fiat-Shamir for highly sound protocols is instantiable
The Fiat–Shamir (FS) transformation (Fiat and Shamir, Crypto '86) is a popular paradigm for constructing very efficient non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) arguments and signature schemes from a hash function and any three-move interactive protocol satisfying certain properties. Despite its wide-spread applicability both in theory and in practice, the known positive results for proving security of the FS paradigm are in the random oracle model only, i.e., they assume that the hash function is modeled as an external random function accessible to all parties. On the other hand, a sequence of negative results shows that for certain classes of interactive protocols, the FS transform cannot be instantiated in the standard model.
We initiate the study of complementary positive results, namely, studying classes of interactive protocols where the FS transform does have standard-model instantiations. In particular, we show that for a class of “highly sound” protocols that we define, instantiating the FS transform via a q-wise independent hash function yields NIZK arguments and secure signature schemes. In the case of NIZK, we obtain a weaker “q-bounded” zero-knowledge flavor where the simulator works for all adversaries asking an a-priori bounded number of queries q; in the case of signatures, we obtain the weaker notion of random-message unforgeability against q-bounded random message attacks.
Our main idea is that when the protocol is highly sound, then instead of using random-oracle programming, one can use complexity leveraging. The question is whether such highly sound protocols exist and if so, which protocols lie in this class. We answer this question in the affirmative in the common reference string (CRS) model and under strong assumptions. Namely, assuming indistinguishability obfuscation and puncturable pseudorandom functions we construct a compiler that transforms any 3-move interactive protocol with instance-independent commitments and simulators (a property satisfied by the Lapidot–Shamir protocol, Crypto '90) into a compiled protocol in the CRS model that is highly sound. We also present a second compiler, in order to be able to start from a larger class of protocols, which only requires instance-independent commitments (a property for example satisfied by the classical protocol for quadratic residuosity due to Blum, Crypto '81). For the second compiler we require dual-mode commitments.
We hope that our work inspires more research on classes of (efficient) 3-move protocols where Fiat–Shamir is (efficiently) instantiable
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