25 research outputs found
Strongly Secure Privacy Amplification Cannot Be Obtained by Encoder of Slepian-Wolf Code
The privacy amplification is a technique to distill a secret key from a
random variable by a function so that the distilled key and eavesdropper's
random variable are statistically independent. There are three kinds of
security criteria for the key distilled by the privacy amplification: the
normalized divergence criterion, which is also known as the weak security
criterion, the variational distance criterion, and the divergence criterion,
which is also known as the strong security criterion. As a technique to distill
a secret key, it is known that the encoder of a Slepian-Wolf (the source coding
with full side-information at the decoder) code can be used as a function for
the privacy amplification if we employ the weak security criterion. In this
paper, we show that the encoder of a Slepian-Wolf code cannot be used as a
function for the privacy amplification if we employ the criteria other than the
weak one.Comment: 10 pages, no figure, A part of this paper will be presented at 2009
IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory in Seoul, Korea. Version 2
is a published version. The results are not changed from version 1.
Explanations are polished and some references are added. In version 3, only
style and DOI are edite
Expurgation Exponent of Leaked Information in Privacy Amplification for Binary Sources
We investigate the privacy amplification problem in which Eve can observe the
uniform binary source through a binary erasure channel (BEC) or a binary
symmetric channel (BSC). For this problem, we derive the so-called expurgation
exponent of the information leaked to Eve. The exponent is derived by relating
the leaked information to the error probability of the linear code that is
generated by the linear hash function used in the privacy amplification, which
is also interesting in its own right. The derived exponent is larger than
state-of-the-art exponent recently derived by Hayashi at low rate.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, to be presented at IEEE Information Theory
Workshop (ITW) 201
The Sender-Excited Secret Key Agreement Model: Capacity, Reliability and Secrecy Exponents
We consider the secret key generation problem when sources are randomly
excited by the sender and there is a noiseless public discussion channel. Our
setting is thus similar to recent works on channels with action-dependent
states where the channel state may be influenced by some of the parties
involved. We derive single-letter expressions for the secret key capacity
through a type of source emulation analysis. We also derive lower bounds on the
achievable reliability and secrecy exponents, i.e., the exponential rates of
decay of the probability of decoding error and of the information leakage.
These exponents allow us to determine a set of strongly-achievable secret key
rates. For degraded eavesdroppers the maximum strongly-achievable rate equals
the secret key capacity; our exponents can also be specialized to previously
known results.
In deriving our strong achievability results we introduce a coding scheme
that combines wiretap coding (to excite the channel) and key extraction (to
distill keys from residual randomness). The secret key capacity is naturally
seen to be a combination of both source- and channel-type randomness. Through
examples we illustrate a fundamental interplay between the portion of the
secret key rate due to each type of randomness. We also illustrate inherent
tradeoffs between the achievable reliability and secrecy exponents. Our new
scheme also naturally accommodates rate limits on the public discussion. We
show that under rate constraints we are able to achieve larger rates than those
that can be attained through a pure source emulation strategy.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures; Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on
Information Theory; Revised in Oct 201
Secure Multiplex Coding with Dependent and Non-Uniform Multiple Messages
The secure multiplex coding (SMC) is a technique to remove rate loss in the
coding for wire-tap channels and broadcast channels with confidential messages
caused by the inclusion of random bits into transmitted signals. SMC replaces
the random bits by other meaningful secret messages, and a collection of secret
messages serves as the random bits to hide the rest of messages. In the
previous researches, multiple secret messages were assumed to have independent
and uniform distributions, which is difficult to be ensured in practice. We
remove this restrictive assumption by a generalization of the channel
resolvability technique.
We also give practical construction techniques for SMC by using an arbitrary
given error-correcting code as an ingredient, and channel-universal coding of
SMC. By using the same principle as the channel-universal SMC, we give coding
for the broadcast channel with confidential messages universal to both channel
and source distributions.Comment: We made several changes to improve the presentatio
Finite-Block-Length Analysis in Classical and Quantum Information Theory
Coding technology is used in several information processing tasks. In
particular, when noise during transmission disturbs communications, coding
technology is employed to protect the information. However, there are two types
of coding technology: coding in classical information theory and coding in
quantum information theory. Although the physical media used to transmit
information ultimately obey quantum mechanics, we need to choose the type of
coding depending on the kind of information device, classical or quantum, that
is being used. In both branches of information theory, there are many elegant
theoretical results under the ideal assumption that an infinitely large system
is available. In a realistic situation, we need to account for finite size
effects. The present paper reviews finite size effects in classical and quantum
information theory with respect to various topics, including applied aspects
A Critical Review of Physical Layer Security in Wireless Networking
Wireless networking has kept evolving with additional features and increasing capacity. Meanwhile, inherent characteristics of wireless networking make it more vulnerable than wired networks. In this thesis we present an extensive and comprehensive review of physical layer security in wireless networking. Different from cryptography, physical layer security, emerging from the information theoretic assessment of secrecy, could leverage the properties of wireless channel for security purpose, by either enabling secret communication without the need of keys, or facilitating the key agreement process. Hence we categorize existing literature into two main branches, namely keyless security and key-based security. We elaborate the evolution of this area from the early theoretic works on the wiretap channel, to its generalizations to more complicated scenarios including multiple-user, multiple-access and multiple-antenna systems, and introduce not only theoretical results but practical implementations. We critically and systematically examine the existing knowledge by analyzing the fundamental mechanics for each approach. Hence we are able to highlight advantages and limitations of proposed techniques, as well their interrelations, and bring insights into future developments of this area
Secure Joint Communication and Sensing
This work considers the problem of mitigating information leakage between communication and sensing in systems jointly performing both operations. Specifically, a discrete memoryless state-dependent broadcast channel model is studied in which (i) the presence of feedback enables a transmitter to convey information, while simultaneously performing channel state estimation; (ii) one of the receivers is treated as an eavesdropper whose state should be estimated but which should remain oblivious to part of the transmitted information. The model abstracts the challenges behind security for joint communication and sensing if one views the channel state as a sensitive attribute, e.g., location. For independent and identically distributed states, perfect output feedback, and when part of the transmitted message should be kept secret, a partial characterization of the secrecy-distortion region is developed. The characterization is exact when the broadcast channel is either physically-degraded or reversely-physically-degraded. The partial characterization is also extended to the situation in which the entire transmitted message should be kept secret. The benefits of a joint approach compared to separation-based secure communication and state-sensing methods are illustrated with a binary joint communication and sensing model