103 research outputs found

    Non-Malleable Extractors with Shorter Seeds and Their Applications

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    Motivated by the problem of how to communicate over a public channel with an active adversary, Dodis and Wichs (STOC’09) introduced the notion of a non-malleable extractor. A non-malleable extractor nmExt : {0, 1}^n ×{0, 1}^d \rightarrow {0, 1}^m takes two inputs, a weakly random W and a uniformly random seed S, and outputs a string which is nearly uniform, given S as well as nmExt(W,A(S)), for an arbitrary function A with A(S) = S. In this paper, by developing the combination and permutation techniques, we improve the error estimation of the extractor of Raz (STOC’05), which plays an extremely important role in the constraints of the non-malleable extractor parameters including seed length. Then we present improved explicit construction of non-malleable extractors. Though our construction is the same as that given by Cohen, Raz and Segev (CCC’12), the parameters are improved. More precisely, we construct an explicit (1016, 1/2)-non-malleable extractor nmExt : {0, 1}^n ×{0, 1}^d \rightarrow {0, 1} with n = 210 and seed length d = 19, while Cohen et al. showed that the seed length is no less than 46/63 +66. Therefore, our method beats the condition “2.01 · log n \leq d \leq n” proposed by Cohen et al., since d is just 1.9 · log n in our construction. We also improve the parameters of the general explicit construction given by Cohen et al. Finally, we give their applications to privacy amplification

    Non-Malleable Codes for Small-Depth Circuits

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    We construct efficient, unconditional non-malleable codes that are secure against tampering functions computed by small-depth circuits. For constant-depth circuits of polynomial size (i.e. AC0\mathsf{AC^0} tampering functions), our codes have codeword length n=k1+o(1)n = k^{1+o(1)} for a kk-bit message. This is an exponential improvement of the previous best construction due to Chattopadhyay and Li (STOC 2017), which had codeword length 2O(k)2^{O(\sqrt{k})}. Our construction remains efficient for circuit depths as large as Θ(log(n)/loglog(n))\Theta(\log(n)/\log\log(n)) (indeed, our codeword length remains nk1+ϵ)n\leq k^{1+\epsilon}), and extending our result beyond this would require separating P\mathsf{P} from NC1\mathsf{NC^1}. We obtain our codes via a new efficient non-malleable reduction from small-depth tampering to split-state tampering. A novel aspect of our work is the incorporation of techniques from unconditional derandomization into the framework of non-malleable reductions. In particular, a key ingredient in our analysis is a recent pseudorandom switching lemma of Trevisan and Xue (CCC 2013), a derandomization of the influential switching lemma from circuit complexity; the randomness-efficiency of this switching lemma translates into the rate-efficiency of our codes via our non-malleable reduction.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figure

    Non-Malleable Extractors - New Tools and Improved Constructions

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    A non-malleable extractor is a seeded extractor with a very strong guarantee - the output of a non-malleable extractor obtained using a typical seed is close to uniform even conditioned on the output obtained using any other seed. The first contribution of this paper consists of two new and improved constructions of non-malleable extractors: - We construct a non-malleable extractor with seed-length O(log(n) * log(log(n))) that works for entropy Omega(log(n)). This improves upon a recent exciting construction by Chattopadhyay, Goyal, and Li (STOC\u2716) that has seed length O(log^{2}(n)) and requires entropy Omega(log^{2}(n)). - Secondly, we construct a non-malleable extractor with optimal seed length O(log(n)) for entropy n/log^{O(1)}(n). Prior to this construction, non-malleable extractors with a logarithmic seed length, due to Li (FOCS\u2712), required entropy 0.49*n. Even non-malleable condensers with seed length O(log(n)), by Li (STOC\u2712), could only support linear entropy. We further devise several tools for enhancing a given non-malleable extractor in a black-box manner. One such tool is an algorithm that reduces the entropy requirement of a non-malleable extractor at the expense of a slightly longer seed. A second algorithm increases the output length of a non-malleable extractor from constant to linear in the entropy of the source. We also devise an algorithm that transforms a non-malleable extractor to the so-called t-non-malleable extractor for any desired t. Besides being useful building blocks for our constructions, we consider these modular tools to be of independent interest

    Near-Optimal Erasure List-Decodable Codes

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    Leakage-Resilient Secret Sharing in Non-Compartmentalized Models

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    Randomness Extractors -- An Exposition

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    Randomness is crucial to computer science, both in theory and applications. In complexity theory, randomness augments computers to offer more powerful models. In cryptography, randomness is essential for seed generation, where the computational model used is generally probabilistic. However, ideal randomness, which is usually assumed to be available in computer science theory and applications, might not be available to real systems. Randomness extractors are objects that turn “weak” randomness into almost “ideal” randomness (pseudorandomness). In this paper, we will build the framework to work with such objects and present explicit constructions. We will discuss a well-known construction of seeded extractors via universal hashing and present a simple argument to extend such results to two-source extractors

    Quantum-Proof Extractors: Optimal up to Constant Factors

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    We give the first construction of a family of quantum-proof extractors that has optimal seed length dependence O(log(n/ǫ)) on the input length n and error ǫ. Our extractors support any min-entropy k = Ω(log n + log1+α (1/ǫ)) and extract m = (1 − α)k bits that are ǫ-close to uniform, for any desired constant α > 0. Previous constructions had a quadratically worse seed length or were restricted to very large input min-entropy or very few output bits. Our result is based on a generic reduction showing that any strong classical condenser is automatically quantum-proof, with comparable parameters. The existence of such a reduction for extractors is a long-standing open question; here we give an affirmative answer for condensers. Once this reduction is established, to obtain our quantum-proof extractors one only needs to consider high entropy sources. We construct quantum-proof extractors with the desired parameters for such sources by extending a classical approach to extractor construction, based on the use of block-sources and sampling, to the quantum setting. Our extractors can be used to obtain improved protocols for device-independent randomness expansion and for privacy amplification

    Extractors: Low Entropy Requirements Colliding With Non-Malleability

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    The known constructions of negligible error (non-malleable) two-source extractors can be broadly classified in three categories: (1) Constructions where one source has min-entropy rate about 1/21/2, the other source can have small min-entropy rate, but the extractor doesn't guarantee non-malleability. (2) Constructions where one source is uniform, and the other can have small min-entropy rate, and the extractor guarantees non-malleability when the uniform source is tampered. (3) Constructions where both sources have entropy rate very close to 11 and the extractor guarantees non-malleability against the tampering of both sources. We introduce a new notion of collision resistant extractors and in using it we obtain a strong two source non-malleable extractor where we require the first source to have 0.80.8 entropy rate and the other source can have min-entropy polylogarithmic in the length of the source. We show how the above extractor can be applied to obtain a non-malleable extractor with output rate 12\frac 1 2, which is optimal. We also show how, by using our extractor and extending the known protocol, one can obtain a privacy amplification secure against memory tampering where the size of the secret output is almost optimal
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