35,269 research outputs found

    On the bound for anonymous secret sharing schemes

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    AbstractIn anonymous secret sharing schemes, the secret can be reconstructed without knowledge of which participants hold which shares. In this paper, we derive a tighter lower bound on the size of the shares than the bound of Blundo and Stinson for anonymous (k,n)-threshold schemes with 1<k<n. Our bound is tight for k=2. We also show a close relationship between optimum anonymous (2,n)-threshold secret schemes and combinatorial designs

    ネットワーク符号化に基づく匿名P2PネットワークのChurnとTampering耐性

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    On an efficient and economic way to add churn- and tampering resilience to an existing anonymous peer-to-peer network using threshold secret sharing schemes and systematic Reed-Solomon code電気通信大学201

    YOLO YOSO: Fast and Simple Encryption and Secret Sharing in the YOSO Model

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    Achieving adaptive (or proactive) security in cryptographic protocols is notoriously difficult due to the adversary\u27s power to dynamically corrupt parties as the execution progresses. Inspired by the work of Benhamouda et al. in TCC 2020, Gentry et al. in CRYPTO 2021 introduced the YOSO (You Only Speak Once) model for constructing adaptively (or proactively) secure protocols in massively distributed settings (e.g. blockchains). In this model, instead of having all parties execute an entire protocol, smaller anonymous committees are randomly chosen to execute each individual round of the protocol. After playing their role, parties encrypt protocol messages towards the the next anonymous committee and erase their internal state before publishing their ciphertexts. However, a big challenge remains in realizing YOSO protocols: efficiently encrypting messages towards anonymous parties selected at random without learning their identities, while proving the encrypted messages are valid w.r.t. the protocol. In particular, the protocols of Benhamouda et al. and of Gentry et al. require showing ciphertexts contain valid shares of secret states. We propose concretely efficient methods for encrypting a protocol\u27s secret state towards a random anonymous committee. We start by proposing a very simple and efficient scheme for encrypting messages towards randomly and anonymously selected parties. We then show constructions of publicly verifiable secret (re-)sharing (PVSS) schemes with concretely efficient proofs of (re-)share validity that can be generically instantiated from encryption schemes with certain linear homomorphic properties. Finally, we show that our PVSS schemes can be efficiently realized from our encyption scheme

    Quantum protocols for anonymous voting and surveying

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    We describe quantum protocols for voting and surveying. A key feature of our schemes is the use of entangled states to ensure that the votes are anonymous and to allow the votes to be tallied. The entanglement is distributed over separated sites; the physical inaccessibility of any one site is sufficient to guarantee the anonymity of the votes. The security of these protocols with respect to various kinds of attack is discussed. We also discuss classical schemes and show that our quantum voting protocol represents a N-fold reduction in computational complexity, where N is the number of voters.Comment: 8 pages. V2 includes the modifications made for the published versio

    Efficient and Privacy-Preserving Ride Sharing Organization for Transferable and Non-Transferable Services

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    Ride-sharing allows multiple persons to share their trips together in one vehicle instead of using multiple vehicles. This can reduce the number of vehicles in the street, which consequently can reduce air pollution, traffic congestion and transportation cost. However, a ride-sharing organization requires passengers to report sensitive location information about their trips to a trip organizing server (TOS) which creates a serious privacy issue. In addition, existing ride-sharing schemes are non-flexible, i.e., they require a driver and a rider to have exactly the same trip to share a ride. Moreover, they are non-scalable, i.e., inefficient if applied to large geographic areas. In this paper, we propose two efficient privacy-preserving ride-sharing organization schemes for Non-transferable Ride-sharing Services (NRS) and Transferable Ride-sharing Services (TRS). In the NRS scheme, a rider can share a ride from its source to destination with only one driver whereas, in TRS scheme, a rider can transfer between multiple drivers while en route until he reaches his destination. In both schemes, the ride-sharing area is divided into a number of small geographic areas, called cells, and each cell has a unique identifier. Each driver/rider should encrypt his trip's data and send an encrypted ride-sharing offer/request to the TOS. In NRS scheme, Bloom filters are used to compactly represent the trip information before encryption. Then, the TOS can measure the similarity between the encrypted trips data to organize shared rides without revealing either the users' identities or the location information. In TRS scheme, drivers report their encrypted routes, an then the TOS builds an encrypted directed graph that is passed to a modified version of Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm to search for an optimal path of rides that can achieve a set of preferences defined by the riders

    Identity based proxy re-encryption scheme (IBPRE+) for secure cloud data sharing

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    (c) 2016 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works.In proxy re-encryption (PRE), a proxy with re-encryption keys can transfer aciphertext computed under Alice's public key into a new one, which can be decrypted by Bob only with his secret key. Recently, Wang et al. introduced the concept of PRE plus (PRE+) scheme, which can be seen as the dual of PRE, and is almost the same as PRE scheme except that the re-encryption keys are generated by the encrypter. Compared to PRE, PRE+ scheme can easily achieve two important properties: first, the message-level based fine-grained delegation and, second, the non-transferable property. In this paper, we extend the concept of PRE+ to the identity based setting. We propose a concrete IBPRE+ scheme based on 3-linear map and roughly discuss its properties. We also demonstrate potential application of this new primitive to secure cloud data sharing.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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