Multiparty Homomorphic Encryption (or: On Removing Setup in Multi-Key FHE)

Abstract

The notion of threshold multi-key fully homomorphic encryption (TMK-FHE) [Lopez-Alt, Tromer, Vaikuntanathan, STOC\u2712] was proposed as a generalization of fully homomorphic encryption to the multiparty setting. In a TMK-FHE scheme for nn parties, each party can individually choose a key pair and use it to encrypt its own private input. Given nn ciphertexts computed in this manner, the parties can homomorphically evaluate a circuit CC over them to obtain a new ciphertext containing the output of CC, which can then be decrypted via a threshold decryption protocol. The key efficiency property is that the size of the (evaluated) ciphertext is independent of the size of the circuit. TMK-FHE with one-round threshold decryption, first constructed by Mukherjee and Wichs [Eurocrypt\u2716], has found several powerful applications in cryptography over the past few years. However, an important drawback of all such TMK-FHE schemes is that they require a common setup which results in applications in the common random string model. To address this concern, we propose a notion of multiparty homomorphic encryption (MHE) that retains the communication efficiency property of TMK-FHE, but sacrifices on the efficiency of final decryption. Specifically, MHE is defined in a similar manner as TMK-FHE, except that the final output computation process performed locally by each party is ``non-compact\u27\u27 in that we allow its computational complexity to depend on the size of the circuit. We observe that this relaxation does not have a significant bearing in many important applications of TMK-FHE. Our main contribution is a construction of MHE from the learning with errors assumption in the plain model. Our scheme can be used to remove the setup in many applications of TMK-FHE. For example, it yields the first construction of low-communication reusable non-interactive MPC in the plain model. To obtain our result, we devise a recursive self-synthesis procedure to transform any ``delayed-function\u27\u27 two-round MPC protocol into an MHE scheme

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