179 results sorted by ID
Pseudorandom Multi-Input Functional Encryption and Applications
Shweta Agrawal, Simran Kumari, Shota Yamada
Public-key cryptography
We construct the first multi-input functional encryption (MIFE) and indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) schemes for pseudorandom functionalities, where the output of the functionality is pseudorandom for every input seen by the adversary. Our MIFE scheme relies on LWE and evasive LWE (Wee, Eurocrypt 2022 and Tsabary, Crypto 2022) for constant arity functions, and a strengthening of evasive LWE for polynomial arity. Thus, we obtain the first MIFE and iO schemes for a nontrivial...
Heuristic Ideal Obfuscation Based on Evasive LWR
Zhuang Shan, Leyou Zhang, Qiqi Lai
Foundations
This paper introduces a heuristic ideal obfuscation scheme grounded in the lattice problems, which differs from that proposed by Jain, Lin, and Luo ([JLLW23], CRYPTO 2023). The approach in this paper follows a methodology akin to that of Brakerski, Dottling, Garg, and Malavolta ([BDGM20], EUROCRYPT 2020) for building indistinguishable obfuscation (iO). The proposal is achieved by leveraging a variant of learning with rounding (LWR) to build linearly homomorphic encryption (LHE) and employing...
A Novel Power-Sum PRG with Applications to Lattice-Based zkSNARKs
Charanjit S Jutla, Eamonn W. Postlethwaite, Arnab Roy
Cryptographic protocols
zkSNARK is a cryptographic primitive that allows a prover to prove to a resource constrained verifier, that it has indeed performed a specified non-deterministic computation correctly, while hiding private witnesses. In this work we focus on lattice based zkSNARK, as this serves two important design goals. Firstly, we get post-quantum zkSNARK schemes with $O(\log (\mbox{Circuit size}))$ sized proofs (without random oracles) and secondly,
the easy verifier circuit allows further...
On the Invalidity of LV16/Lin17 Obfuscation Schemes Revisited
Yupu Hu, Siyue Dong, Baocang Wang, Xingting Dong
Attacks and cryptanalysis
LV16/Lin17 IO schemes are famous progresses towards simplifying obfuscation mechanism. In fact, these two schemes only constructed two compact functional encryption (CFE) algorithms, while other things were taken to the AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame. CFE algorithms are inserted into the AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame to form a complete IO scheme. We stated the invalidity of LV16/Lin17 IO schemes. More detailedly, under reasonable assumption “real white box (RWB)” LV16/Lin17 CFE algorithms...
How to Use (Plain) Witness Encryption: Registered ABE, Flexible Broadcast, and More
Cody Freitag, Brent Waters, David J. Wu
Cryptographic protocols
Witness encryption is a generalization of public-key encryption where the public key can be any NP statement x and the associated decryption key is any witness w for x. While early constructions of witness encryption relied on multilinear maps and indistinguishability obfuscation (iO), recent works have provided direct constructions of witness encryption that are more efficient than iO (and also seem unlikely to yield iO). Motivated by this progress, we revisit the possibility of using...
On the Invalidity of LV16/Lin17 Obfuscation Schemes
Yupu Hu, Siyue Dong, Baocang Wang, Xingting Dong
Attacks and cryptanalysis
Indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) is at the frontier of cryptography research for several years. LV16/Lin17 obfuscation schemes are famous progresses towards simplifying obfuscation mechanism. In fact, these two schemes only constructed two compact functional encryption (CFE) algorithms, while other things were taken to AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame. That is, CFE algorithms are inserted into AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame to form a complete IO scheme. The basic structure of two CFE...
Privately Puncturing PRFs from Lattices: Adaptive Security and Collusion Resistant Pseudorandomness
Rupeng Yang
Public-key cryptography
A private puncturable pseudorandom function (PRF) enables one to create a constrained version of a PRF key, which can be used to evaluate the PRF at all but some punctured points. In addition, the constrained key reveals no information about the punctured points and the PRF values on them. Existing constructions of private puncturable PRFs are only proven to be secure against a restricted adversary that must commit to the punctured points before viewing any information. It is an open problem...
Obfuscation of Evasive Algebraic Set Membership
Steven D. Galbraith, Trey Li
Public-key cryptography
We define the membership function of a set as the function that determines whether an input is an element of the set. Canetti, Rothblum, and Varia showed how to obfuscate evasive membership functions of hyperplanes over a finite field of order an exponentially large prime, assuming the hardness of a modified decisional Diffie-Hellman problem. Barak, Bitansky, Canetti, Kalai, Paneth, and Sahai extended their work from hyperplanes to hypersurfaces of bounded degree, assuming multilinear maps....
Additive-Homomorphic Functional Commitments and Applications to Homomorphic Signatures
Dario Catalano, Dario Fiore, Ida Tucker
Cryptographic protocols
Functional Commitments (FC) allow one to reveal functions of committed data in a succinct and verifiable way. In this paper we put forward the notion of additive-homomorphic FC and show two efficient, pairing-based, realizations of this primitive supporting multivariate polynomials of constant degree and monotone span programs, respectively. We also show applications of the new primitive in the contexts of homomorphic signatures: we show that additive-homomorphic FCs can be used to realize...
2022/1301
Last updated: 2022-10-19
On the Invalidity of Lin16/Lin17 Obfuscation Schemes
Hu Yupu, Dong Siyue, Wang Baocang, Dong Xingting
Attacks and cryptanalysis
Indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) is at the frontier of cryptography research. Lin16/Lin17 obfuscation schemes are famous progresses towards simplifying obfuscation mechanism. Their basic structure can be described in the following way: to obfuscate a polynomial-time-computable Boolean function $c(x)$, first divide it into a group of component functions with low-degree and low-locality by using randomized encoding, and then hide the shapes of these component functions by using...
Cryptographic multilinear maps using pro-p groups
Delaram Kahrobaei, Mima Stanojkovski
Cryptographic protocols
Kahrobaei, Tortora, Tota showed how, to any nilpotent group of class n, one can associate a non-interactive key exchange protocol between n+1 users. The multilinear commutator maps associated to nilpotent groups play a key role in this protocol. In the present paper, we explore some alternative platforms, such as pro-p groups.
Lockable Obfuscation from Circularly Insecure Fully Homomorphic Encryption
Kamil Kluczniak
Public-key cryptography
In a lockable obfuscation scheme, a party called the obfuscator takes as input a circuit C, a lock value y and, a message m, and outputs an obfuscated circuit. Given the obfuscated circuit, an evaluator can run it on an input x and learn the message if C(x) = y. For security, we require that the obfuscation reveals no information on the circuit as long as the lock y has high entropy even given the circuit C.
The only known constructions of lockable obfuscation schemes require...
Attribute-Based Access Control for Inner Product Functional Encryption from LWE
Tapas Pal, Ratna Dutta
Public-key cryptography
The notion of functional encryption (FE) was proposed as a generalization of plain public-key encryption to enable a much more fine-grained handling of encrypted data, with advanced applications such as cloud computing, multi-party computations, obfuscating circuits or Turing machines. While FE for general circuits or Turing machines gives a natural instantiation of the many cryptographic primitives, existing FE schemes are based on indistinguishability obfuscation or multilinear maps which...
2021/112
Last updated: 2021-02-06
Full-Resilient Memory-Optimum Multi-Party Non-Interactive Key Exchange
Majid Salimi, Hamid Mala, Honorio Martin, Pedro Peris-Lopez
Public-key cryptography
Multi-Party Non-Interactive Key Exchange (MP-NIKE) is a fundamental cryptographic
primitive in which users register into a key generation centre and receive a public/private key pair each. After
that, any subset of these users can compute a shared key without any interaction. Nowadays, IoT devices
suffer from a high number and large size of messages exchanged in the Key Management Protocol (KMP).
To overcome this, an MP-NIKE scheme can eliminate the airtime and latency of messages...
2021/014
Last updated: 2021-02-06
Efficient Multilinear Map from Graded Encoding Scheme
Majid Salimi
Public-key cryptography
Though the multilinear maps have many cryptographic applications, secure and efficient construction of such maps is an open problem. Many multilinear maps like GGH, GGH15, CLT, and CLT15 have been and are being proposed, while none of them is both secure and efficient. The construction of some multilinear maps is based on the Graded Encoding Scheme (GES), where, the necessity of announcing zero-testing parameter and encoding of zero has destroyed the security of the multilinear map.
Attempt...
Ciphertext Policy Attribute Based Encryption for Arithmetic circuits
Mahdi Mahdavi Oliaee, Zahra Ahmadian
Public-key cryptography
Applying access structure to encrypted sensitive data is one of the challenges in communication networks and cloud computing. Various methods have been proposed to achieve this goal, one of the most interesting of which is Attribute-Based Encryption (ABE). In ABE schemes, the access structure, which is defined as a policy, can be applied to the key or ciphertext. Thus, if the policy is applied to the key, it is called the Key Policy Attribute-Based Encryption (KP-ABE), and on the other hand,...
Witness Encryption from Garbled Circuit and Multikey Fully Homomorphic Encryption Techniques
Kamil Kluczniak
Public-key cryptography
In a witness encryption scheme, to decrypt a ciphertext associated with an NP statement, the decrypter takes as input a witness testifying that the statement is in the language. When the statement is not in the language, then the message is hidden. Thus far, the only provably secure constructions assume the existence of indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) and multilinear maps (MMaps).
We make progress towards building polynomially efficient witness encryption for NP without resorting to...
Optimal Broadcast Encryption from LWE and Pairings in the Standard Model
Shweta Agrawal, Daniel Wichs, Shota Yamada
Public-key cryptography
Broadcast Encryption with optimal parameters was a long-standing problem, whose first solution was provided in an elegant work by Boneh, Waters and Zhandry [BWZ14]. However, this work relied on multilinear maps of logarithmic degree, which is not considered a standard assumption. Recently, Agrawal and Yamada [AY20] improved this state of affairs by providing the first construction of optimal broadcast encryption from Bilinear Maps and Learning With Errors (LWE). However, their proof of...
Forward Security under Leakage Resilience, Revisited
Suvradip Chakraborty, Harish Karthikeyan, Adam O'Neill, C. Pandu Rangan
Public-key cryptography
As both notions employ the same key-evolution paradigm, Bellare \emph{et al.} (CANS 2017) study combining forward security with leakage resilience. The idea is for forward security to serve as a hedge in case at some point the full key gets exposed from the leakage. In particular, Bellare \emph{et al.} combine forward security with \emph{continual} leakage resilience, dubbed FS+CL. Our first result improves on Bellare \emph{et al.}'s FS+CL secure PKE scheme by building one from any...
Simultaneous Diagonalization of Incomplete Matrices and Applications
Jean-Sébastien Coron, Luca Notarnicola, Gabor Wiese
Public-key cryptography
We consider the problem of recovering the entries of diagonal matrices $\{U_a\}_a$ for $a = 1,\ldots,t$ from multiple ``incomplete'' samples $\{W_a\}_a$ of the form $W_a=PU_aQ$, where $P$ and $Q$ are unknown matrices of low rank. We devise practical algorithms for this problem depending on the ranks of $P$ and $Q$. This problem finds its motivation in cryptanalysis: we show how to significantly improve previous algorithms for solving the approximate common divisor problem and breaking CLT13...
2020/610
Last updated: 2021-08-19
Stronger Multilinear Maps from Indistinguishability Obfuscation
Navid Alamati, Hart Montgomery, Sikhar Patranabis
Foundations
We show how to construct new multilinear maps from subexponentially secure indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) and standard assumptions. In particular, we show how to construct multilinear maps with arbitrary predetermined degree of multilinearity where each of the following assumptions hold: SXDH, exponent-DDH (for both symmetric and asymmetric multilinear maps), and all other assumptions implied by these assumptions (including k-party-DDH and k-Lin and its variants). Our constructions...
Indistinguishability Obfuscation Without Maps: Attacks and Fixes for Noisy Linear FE
Shweta Agrawal, Alice Pellet-Mary
Foundations
Candidates of Indistinguishability Obfuscation (iO) can be categorized as ``direct'' or ``bootstrapping based''. Direct constructions rely on high degree multilinear maps [GGH13,GGHRSW13] and provide heuristic guarantees, while bootstrapping based constructions [LV16,Lin17,LT17,AJLMS19,Agr19,JLMS19] rely, in the best case, on bilinear maps as well as new variants of the Learning With Errors (LWE) assumption and pseudorandom generators. Recent times have seen exciting progress in the...
Optimal Broadcast Encryption from Pairings and LWE
Shweta Agrawal, Shota Yamada
Public-key cryptography
Boneh, Waters and Zhandry (CRYPTO 2014) used multilinear maps to provide a solution to the long-standing problem of public-key broadcast encryption (BE) where all parameters in the system are small. In this work, we improve their result by providing a solution that uses only bilinear maps and Learning With Errors (LWE). Our scheme is fully collusion-resistant against any number of colluders, and can be generalized to an identity-based broadcast system with short parameters. Thus, we reclaim...
Lattice-Inspired Broadcast Encryption and Succinct Ciphertext-Policy ABE
Zvika Brakerski, Vinod Vaikuntanathan
Foundations
We propose a candidate ciphertext-policy attribute-based encryption (CP-ABE) scheme for circuits, where the ciphertext size depends only on the depth of the policy circuit (and not its size). This, in particular, gives us a Broadcast Encryption (BE) scheme where the size of the keys and ciphertexts have a poly-logarithmic dependence on the number of users. This goal was previously only known to be achievable assuming ideal multilinear maps (Boneh, Waters and Zhandry, Crypto 2014) or...
Offline Witness Encryption with Semi-Adaptive Security
Peter Chvojka, Tibor Jager, Saqib A. Kakvi
Foundations
The first construction of Witness Encryption (WE) by Garg et al. (STOC 2013) has led to many exciting avenues of research in the past years. A particularly interesting variant is Offline WE (OWE) by Abusalah et al. (ACNS 2016), as the encryption algorithm uses neither obfuscation nor multilinear maps.
Current OWE schemes provide only selective security. That is, the adversary must commit to their challenge messages $m_0$ and $m_1$ before seeing the public parameters. We provide a new,...
Simplifying Constructions and Assumptions for $i\mathcal{O}$
Aayush Jain, Huijia Lin, Amit Sahai
Public-key cryptography
The existence of secure indistinguishability obfuscators ($i\mathcal{O}$) has far-reaching implications, significantly expanding the scope of problems amenable to cryptographic study. A recent line of work
[Ananth, Jain, and Sahai, 2018; Aggrawal, 2018; Lin and Matt, 2018; Jain, Lin, Matt, and Sahai, 2019] has developed a new theory for building $i\mathcal{O}$~from simpler building blocks, and represents the state of the art in constructing $i\mathcal{O}$~from succinct and...
New Approaches to Traitor Tracing with Embedded Identities
Rishab Goyal, Venkata Koppula, Brent Waters
Public-key cryptography
In a traitor tracing (TT) system for $n$ users, every user has his/her own secret key. Content providers can encrypt messages using a public key, and each user can decrypt the ciphertext using his/her secret key. Suppose some of the $n$ users collude to construct a pirate decoding box. Then the tracing scheme has a special algorithm, called $Trace$, which can identify at least one of the secret keys used to construct the pirate decoding box.
Traditionally, the trace algorithm output only...
Simplified Revocable Hierarchical Identity-Based Encryption from Lattices
Shixiong Wang, Juanyang Zhang, Jingnan He, Huaxiong Wang, Chao Li
Public-key cryptography
As an extension of identity-based encryption (IBE), revocable hierarchical IBE (RHIBE) supports both key revocation and key delegation simultaneously, which are two important functionalities for cryptographic use in practice. Recently in PKC 2019, Katsumata et al. constructed the first lattice-based RHIBE scheme with decryption key exposure resistance (DKER). Such constructions are all based on bilinear or multilinear maps before their work. In this paper, we simplify the construction of...
Practical Attribute Based Inner Product Functional Encryption from Simple Assumptions
Yuechen Chen, Linru Zhang, Siu-Ming Yiu
Public-key cryptography
Functional encryption (FE) that bases on user attributes has many useful practical applications. For example, a company may only authorize department heads of other sections to query the average sale figures of the sales department from the encrypted sales amounts of all sales. However, FE schemes that can solve this problem are based on new, but not well-studied assumptions (such as indistinguishable obfuscation or multilinear maps). It is not clear if these FE schemes are secure. In this...
Indistinguishability Obfuscation Without Multilinear Maps: New Paradigms via Low Degree Weak Pseudorandomness and Security Amplification
Prabhanjan Ananth, Aayush Jain, Huijia Lin, Christian Matt, Amit Sahai
The existence of secure indistinguishability obfuscators (iO) has far-reaching implications, significantly expanding the scope of problems amenable to cryptographic study. All known approaches to constructing iO rely on $d$-linear maps.
While secure bilinear maps are well established in cryptographic literature, the security of candidates for $d>2$ is poorly understood. We propose a new approach to constructing iO for general circuits. Unlike all previously known realizations of iO, we...
Attribute Based Encryption (and more) for Nondeterministic Finite Automata from LWE
Shweta Agrawal, Monosij Maitra, Shota Yamada
Public-key cryptography
Constructing Attribute Based Encryption (ABE) [SW05] for uniform models of computation from standard assumptions, is an important problem, about which very little is known. The only known ABE schemes in this setting that i) avoid reliance on multilinear maps or indistinguishability obfuscation, ii) support unbounded length inputs and iii) permit unbounded key requests to the adversary in the security game, are by Waters from Crypto, 2012 [Wat12] and its variants.
Waters provided the first...
How to Delegate Computations Publicly
Yael Kalai, Omer Paneth, Lisa Yang
We construct a delegation scheme for all polynomial time computations. Our scheme is publicly verifiable and completely non-interactive in the common reference string (CRS) model.
Our scheme is based on an efficiently falsifiable decisional assumption on groups with bilinear maps. Prior to this work, publicly verifiable non-interactive delegation schemes were only known under knowledge assumptions (or in the Random Oracle model) or under non-standard assumptions related to obfuscation or...
Dual-Mode NIZKs from Obfuscation
Dennis Hofheinz, Bogdan Ursu
Two standard security properties of a non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK)
scheme are soundness and zero-knowledge. But while standard NIZK systems can
only provide one of those properties against unbounded adversaries,
dual-mode NIZK systems allow to choose dynamically and adaptively which
of these properties holds unconditionally. The only known dual-mode NIZK
systems are Groth-Sahai proofs (which have proved extremely useful in a variety
of applications), and the
FHE-based NIZK...
Cryptanalysis of CLT13 Multilinear Maps with Independent Slots
Jean-Sebastien Coron, Luca Notarnicola
Public-key cryptography
Many constructions based on multilinear maps require independent slots in the plaintext, so that multiple computations can be performed in parallel over the slots. Such constructions are usually based on CLT13 multilinear maps, since CLT13 inherently provides a composite encoding space. However, a vulnerability was identified at Crypto 2014 by Gentry, Lewko and Waters, with a lattice-based attack in dimension 2, and the authors have suggested a simple countermeasure. In this paper, we...
A New Variant of the Winternitz One Time Signature Scheme Based on Graded Encoding Schemes
Hossein Oraei, Massoud Hadian Dehkordi
Public-key cryptography
The Winternitz one-time signature (WOTS) scheme, which can be described using a certain number of so-called ``function chains", plays an important role in the design of both stateless and stateful many-time signature schemes. This work introduces WOTS^GES, a new WOTS type signature scheme in which the need for computing all of the intermediate values of the chains is eliminated. This significantly reduces the number of required operations needed to calculate the algorithms of WOTS^GES. To...
On Kilian's Randomization of Multilinear Map Encodings
Jean-Sebastien Coron, Hilder V. L. Pereira
Public-key cryptography
Indistinguishability obfuscation constructions based on matrix branching programs generally proceed in two steps: first apply Kilian's randomization of the matrix product computation, and then encode the matrices using a multilinear map scheme. In this paper we observe that by applying Kilian's randomization after encoding, the complexity of the best attacks is significantly increased for CLT13 multilinear maps. This implies that much smaller parameters can be used, which improves the...
Constrained PRFs for Bit-fixing (and More) from OWFs with Adaptive Security and Constant Collusion Resistance
Alex Davidson, Shuichi Katsumata, Ryo Nishimaki, Shota Yamada
Foundations
Constrained pseudorandom functions (CPRFs) allow learning "constrained" PRF keys that can evaluate the PRF on a subset of the input space, or based on some sort of predicate. First introduced by Boneh and Waters [AC'13], Kiayias et al. [CCS'13] and Boyle et al. [PKC'14], they have been shown to be a useful cryptographic primitive with many applications. The full security definition of CPRFs requires the adversary to learn multiple constrained keys in an arbitrary order, a requirement for...
A Bit-fixing PRF with O(1) Collusion-Resistance from LWE
Alex Davidson, Ryo Nishimaki
Foundations
Constrained pseudorandom functions (CPRFs) allow learning modified PRF keys that can evaluate the PRF on a subset of the input space, or based on some sort of predicate. First introduced by Boneh and Waters [Asiacrypt 2013], they have been shown to be a useful cryptographic primitive with many applications. The full security definition of CPRFs requires the adversary to learn multiple constrained keys, a requirement for all of these applications. Unfortunately, existing constructions of...
Obfuscation Using Tensor Products
Craig Gentry, Charanjit S. Jutla, Daniel Kane
We describe obfuscation schemes for matrix-product branching programs that are purely algebraic and employ matrix groups and tensor algebra over a finite field. In contrast to the obfuscation schemes of Garg et al (SICOM 2016) which were based on multilinear maps, these schemes do not use noisy encodings. We prove that there is no efficient attack on our scheme based on re-linearization techniques of Kipnis-Shamir (CRYPTO 99) and its generalization called XL-methodology (Courtois et al,...
Multiparty Non-Interactive Key Exchange and More From Isogenies on Elliptic Curves
Dan Boneh, Darren Glass, Daniel Krashen, Kristin Lauter, Shahed Sharif, Alice Silverberg, Mehdi Tibouchi, Mark Zhandry
Public-key cryptography
We describe a framework for constructing an efficient non-interactive key
exchange (NIKE) protocol for n parties for any n >= 2. Our approach is
based on the problem of computing isogenies between isogenous elliptic
curves, which is believed to be difficult. We do not obtain a working
protocol because of a missing step that is currently an open problem.
What we need to complete our protocol is an efficient algorithm that
takes as input an abelian variety presented as a product of...
Pseudo Flawed-Smudging Generators and Their Application to Indistinguishability Obfuscation
Huijia Lin, Christian Matt
Foundations
We introduce Pseudo Flawed-smudging Generators (PFGs). A PFG is an expanding function whose outputs $\mathbf Y$ satisfy a weak form of pseudo-randomness. Roughly speaking, for some polynomial bound $B$, and every distribution $\chi$ over $B$-bounded noise vectors, it guarantees that the distribution of $(\mathbf e,\ \mathbf Y + \mathbf e)$ is indistinguishable from that of $(\mathbf e', \mathbf Y + \mathbf e)$, where $\mathbf e \gets \chi$ is a random sample from $\chi$, and $\mathbf e'$ is...
New Methods for Indistinguishability Obfuscation: Bootstrapping and Instantiation
Shweta Agrawal
Constructing indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) [BGI+01] is a central open question in cryptography. We provide new methods to make progress towards this goal. Our contributions may be summarized as follows:
1. {\textbf Bootstrapping}. In a recent work, Lin and Tessaro [LT17] (LT) show that iO may be constructed using i) Functional Encryption (FE) for polynomials of degree $L$ , ii) Pseudorandom Generators (PRG) with blockwise locality $L$ and polynomial expansion, and iii) Learning With...
Indistinguishability Obfuscation Without Multilinear Maps: iO from LWE, Bilinear Maps, and Weak Pseudorandomness
Prabhanjan Ananth, Aayush Jain, Amit Sahai
The existence of secure indistinguishability obfuscators (iO) has far-reaching implications, significantly expanding the scope of problems amenable to cryptographic study. All known approaches to
constructing iO rely on $d$-linear maps which allow the encoding of elements from a large domain, evaluating degree $d$ polynomials on them, and testing if the output is zero. While secure bilinear maps are well established in cryptographic literature, the security of candidates for $d>2$ is poorly...
Offline Witness Encryption from Witness PRF and Randomized Encoding in CRS model
Tapas Pal, Ratna Dutta
Public-key cryptography
Witness pseudorandom functions (witness PRFs) generate a pseudorandom value corresponding to an instance x of an NP language and the same pseudorandom value can be recomputed if a witness w that x is in the language is known. Zhandry (TCC 2016) introduced the idea of witness PRFs and gave a construction using multilinear maps. Witness PRFs can be interconnected with the recent powerful cryptographic primitive called witness encryption. In witness encryption, a message can be encrypted with...
Return of GGH15: Provable Security Against Zeroizing Attacks
James Bartusek, Jiaxin Guan, Fermi Ma, Mark Zhandry
Cryptographic protocols
The GGH15 multilinear maps have served as the foundation for a number of cutting-edge cryptographic proposals. Unfortunately, many schemes built on GGH15 have been explicitly broken by so-called ``zeroizing attacks,'' which exploit leakage from honest zero-test queries. The precise settings in which zeroizing attacks are possible have remained unclear. Most notably, none of the current indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) candidates from GGH15 have any formal security guarantees against...
Cost-Effective Private Linear Key Agreement With Adaptive CCA Security from Prime Order Multilinear Maps and Tracing Traitors
Mriganka Mandal, Ratna Dutta
Public-key cryptography
Private linear key agreement (PLKA) enables a group of users to agree upon a common session key in a broadcast encryption (BE) scenario, while traitor tracing (TT) system allows a tracer to identify conspiracy of a troop of colluding pirate users. This paper introduces a key encapsulation mechanism in BE that provides the functionalities of both PLKA and TT in a unified cost-effective primitive. Our PLKA based traitor tracing offers a solution to the problem of achieving full collusion...
Cryptanalyses of Branching Program Obfuscations over GGH13 Multilinear Map from the NTRU Problem
Jung Hee Cheon, Minki Hhan, Jiseung Kim, Changmin Lee
In this paper, we propose cryptanalyses of all existing indistinguishability
obfuscation ($iO$) candidates based on branching programs (BP) over GGH13
multilinear map for all recommended parameter settings.
To achieve this, we introduce two novel techniques, program converting using
NTRU-solver and matrix zeroizing, which can be applied to a wide range of
obfuscation constructions and BPs compared to previous attacks. We then prove
that, for the suggested parameters, the existing...
Multilinear maps via secret ring
Chunsheng Gu
Public-key cryptography
Garg, Gentry and Halevi (GGH13) described the first candidate multilinear maps using ideal lattices. However, Hu and Jia recently presented an efficient attack on the GGH13 map, which breaks the multipartite key exchange (MPKE) and witness encryption (WE) based on GGH13. In this work, we describe a new variant of GGH13 using secret ring, which preserves the origin functionality of GGH13. The security of our variant depends upon the following new hardness problem. Given the determinant of the...
A Simple Obfuscation Scheme for Pattern-Matching with Wildcards
Allison Bishop, Lucas Kowalczyk, Tal Malkin, Valerio Pastro, Mariana Raykova, Kevin Shi
We give a simple and efficient method for obfuscating pattern matching with wildcards. In other words, we construct a way to check an input against a secret pattern, which is described in terms of prescribed values interspersed with unconstrained “wildcard” slots. As long as the support of the pattern is sufficiently sparse and the pattern itself is chosen from an appropriate distribution, we prove that a polynomial-time adversary cannot find a matching input, except with negligible...
Graded Encoding Schemes from Obfuscation
Pooya Farshim, Julia Hesse, Dennis Hofheinz, Enrique Larraia
Foundations
We construct a graded encoding scheme (GES), an approximate form of graded multilinear maps. Our construction relies on indistinguishability obfuscation, and a pairing-friendly group in which (a suitable variant of) the strong Diffie--Hellman assumption holds. As a result of this abstract approach, our GES has a number of advantages over previous constructions. Most importantly:
a) We can prove that the multilinear decisional Diffie--Hellman
(MDDH) assumption holds in our setting, assuming...
Cryptanalysis of indistinguishability obfuscation using GGH13 without ideals
Gu Chunsheng
Recently, Albrecht, Davidson and Larraia described a variant of the GGH13 without ideals and presented the distinguishing attacks in simplified branching program security model. Their result partially demonstrates that there seems to be a structural defect in the GGH13 encoding that is not related to the ideal $\langle g \rangle$. However, it is not clear whether a variant of the CGH attack described by Chen, Gentry and Halevi can be used to break a branching program obfuscator instantiated...
Impossibility of Order-Revealing Encryption in Idealized Models
Mark Zhandry, Cong Zhang
An Order-Revealing Encryption (ORE) scheme gives a public procedure by which two ciphertexts can be compared to reveal the order of their underlying plaintexts. The ideal security notion for ORE is that \emph{only} the order is revealed --- anything else, such as the distance between plaintexts, is hidden. The only known constructions of ORE achieving such ideal security are based on cryptographic multilinear maps and are currently too impractical for real-world applications.
In this work,...
The MMap Strikes Back: Obfuscation and New Multilinear Maps Immune to CLT13 Zeroizing Attacks
Fermi Ma, Mark Zhandry
All known multilinear map candidates have suffered from a class of attacks known as ``zeroizing'' attacks, which render them unusable for many applications. We provide a new construction of polynomial-degree multilinear maps and show that our scheme is provably immune to zeroizing attacks under a strengthening of the Branching Program Un-Annihilatability Assumption (Garg et al., TCC 2016-B).
Concretely, we build our scheme on top of the CLT13 multilinear maps (Coron et al., CRYPTO 2013). ...
Notes On GGH13 Without The Presence Of Ideals
Martin R. Albrecht, Alex Davidson, Enrique Larraia, Alice Pellet--Mary
Foundations
We investigate the merits of altering the Garg, Gentry and Halevi (GGH13) graded encoding scheme to remove the presence of the ideal \(\langle g \rangle\). In particular, we show that we can alter the form of encodings so that effectively a new \(g_i\) is used for each source group \(\mathbb{G}_i\), while retaining correctness. This would appear to prevent all known attacks on indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) candidates instantiated using GGH13. However, when analysing security in...
Lower Bounds on Obfuscation from All-or-Nothing Encryption Primitives
Sanjam Garg, Mohammad Mahmoody, Ameer Mohammed
Indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) enables many heretofore out-of-reach applications in cryptography. However, currently all known constructions of
IO are based on multilinear maps which are poorly understood. Hence, tremendous research effort has been put towards basing obfuscation on better-understood computational assumptions. Recently, another path to IO has emerged through functional encryption [Anath and Jain, CRYPTO 2015; Bitansky and Vaikuntanathan, FOCS 2015] but such FE schemes...
Algebraic XOR-RKA-Secure Pseudorandom Functions from Post-Zeroizing Multilinear Maps
Michel Abdalla, Fabrice Benhamouda, Alain Passelègue
Due to the vast number of successful related-key attacks against existing block-ciphers, related-key security has become a common design goal for such primitives. In these attacks, the adversary is not only capable of seeing the output of a function on inputs of its choice, but also on related keys. At Crypto 2010, Bellare and Cash proposed the first construction of a pseudorandom function that could provably withstand such attacks based on standard assumptions. Their construction, as well...
On the Statistical Leak of the GGH13 Multilinear Map and some Variants
Léo Ducas, Alice Pellet--Mary
Public-key cryptography
At EUROCRYPT 2013, Garg, Gentry and Halevi proposed a candidate construction (later referred as GGH13) of cryptographic multilinear map (MMap). Despite weaknesses uncovered by Hu and Jia (EUROCRYPT 2016), this candidate is still used for designing obfuscators.
The naive version of the GGH13 scheme was deemed susceptible to averaging attacks, i.e., it could suffer from a statistical leak (yet no precise attack was described). A variant was therefore devised, but it remains heuristic....
Multilinear Maps Using a Variant of Ring-LWE
Gu Chunsheng
Public-key cryptography
GGH13, CLT13 and GGH15 of multilinear maps suffer from zeroizing attacks. In this paper, we present a new construction of multilinear maps using a variant of ring-LWE (vRLWE). Furthermore, we also present two new variants of vRLWE, which respectively support the applications of multipartite key exchange and witness encryption. At the same time, we also present a new variant of GGH13 using matrix form. The security of our construction depends upon new hardness assumptions.
Indistinguishability Obfuscation from Trilinear Maps and Block-Wise Local PRGs
Huijia Lin, Stefano Tessaro
We consider the question of finding the lowest degree $L$ for which $L$-linear maps suffice to obtain IO. The current state of the art (Lin, EUROCRYPT'16, CRYPTO '17; Lin and Vaikunthanathan, FOCS'16; Ananth and Sahai, EUROCRYPT '17) is that $L$-linear maps (under suitable security assumptions) suffice for IO, assuming the existence of pseudo-random generators (PRGs) with output locality $L$. However, these works cannot answer the question of whether $L < 5$ suffices, as no...
Lattice-Based SNARGs and Their Application to More Efficient Obfuscation
Dan Boneh, Yuval Ishai, Amit Sahai, David J. Wu
Succinct non-interactive arguments (SNARGs) enable verifying NP computations with substantially lower complexity than that required for classical NP verification. In this work, we first construct a lattice-based SNARG candidate with quasi-optimal succinctness (where the argument size is quasilinear in the security parameter). Further extension of our methods yields the first SNARG (from any assumption) that is quasi-optimal in terms of both prover overhead (polylogarithmic in the security...
Constraint-hiding Constrained PRFs for NC1 from LWE
Ran Canetti, Yilei Chen
Constraint-hiding constrained PRFs (CHCPRFs), initially studied by Boneh, Lewi, and Wu [PKC 2017], are constrained PRFs where the constrained key hides the description of the constraint. Envisioned with powerful applications such as searchable encryption, private-detectable watermarking, and symmetric deniable encryption, the only known candidates of CHCPRFs are based on indistinguishability obfuscation or multilinear maps with strong security properties.
In this paper, we construct CHCPRFs...
Separating Semantic and Circular Security for Symmetric-Key Bit Encryption from the Learning with Errors Assumption
Rishab Goyal, Venkata Koppula, Brent Waters
In this work we separate private-key semantic security from circular security using the Learning with Error assumption. Prior works used the less standard assumptions of multilinear maps or indistinguishability obfuscation. To achieve our results we develop new techniques for obliviously evaluating branching programs.
Implementing BP-Obfuscation Using Graph-Induced Encoding
Shai Halevi, Tzipora Halevi, Victor Shoup, Noah Stephens-Davidowitz
We implemented (a simplified version of) the branching-program obfuscator due to Gentry et al. (GGH15), which is itself a variation of the first obfuscation candidate by Garg et al. (GGHRSW13). To keep within the realm of feasibility, we had to give up on some aspects of the construction, specifically the ``multiplicative bundling'' factors that protect against mixed-input attacks. Hence our implementation can only support read-once branching programs.
To be able to handle anything more...
Private Puncturable PRFs From Standard Lattice Assumptions
Dan Boneh, Sam Kim, Hart Montgomery
A puncturable pseudorandom function (PRF) has a master key $k$ that enables one
to evaluate the PRF at all points of the domain, and has a punctured key $k_x$
that enables one to evaluate the PRF at all points but one. The punctured key
$k_x$ reveals no information about the value of the PRF at the punctured point
$x$. Punctured PRFs play an important role in cryptography, especially in
applications of indistinguishability obfuscation. However, in previous
constructions, the punctured key...
Dual System Framework in Multilinear Settings and Applications to Fully Secure (Compact) ABE for Unbounded-Size Circuits
Nuttapong Attrapadung
We propose a new generic framework for constructing fully secure attribute based encryption (ABE) in multilinear settings. It is applicable in a generic manner to any predicates. Previous generic frameworks of this kind are given only in bilinear group settings, where applicable predicate classes are limited. Our framework provides an abstraction of dual system paradigms over composite-order graded multilinear encoding schemes in a black-box manner.
As applications, we propose new fully...
Projective Arithmetic Functional Encryption and Indistinguishability Obfuscation From Degree-5 Multilinear Maps
Prabhanjan Ananth, Amit Sahai
Foundations
In this work, we propose a variant of functional encryption called projective
arithmetic functional encryption (PAFE). Roughly speaking, our notion is like functional
encryption for arithmetic circuits, but where secret keys only yield partially decrypted values. These partially decrypted values can be linearly combined with known coefficients and the result can be tested to see if it is a small value.
We give a degree-preserving construction of PAFE from multilinear maps. That is, we show...
Indistinguishability Obfuscation from SXDH on 5-Linear Maps and Locality-5 PRGs
Huijia Lin
Two recent works [Lin, EUROCRYPT 2016, Lin and Vaikuntanathan, FOCS 2016] showed how to construct Indistinguishability Obfuscation (IO) from constant degree multilinear maps. However, the concrete degrees of multilinear maps used in their constructions exceed 30.
In this work, we reduce the degree of multilinear maps needed to 5, by giving a new construction of IO from asymmetric $L$-linear maps and a pseudo-random generator (PRG) with output locality $L$ and polynomial stretch.
When...
Preventing CLT Attacks on Obfuscation with Linear Overhead
Rex Fernando, Peter M. R. Rasmussen, Amit Sahai
Foundations
We describe a defense against zeroizing attacks on indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) over the CLT13 multilinear map construction that only causes an additive blowup in the size of the branching program. This defense even applies to the most recent extension of the attack by Coron et al. (ePrint 2016), under which a much larger class of branching programs is vulnerable. To accomplish this, we describe an attack model for the current attacks on iO over CLT13 by distilling an essential...
Zeroizing Attacks on Indistinguishability Obfuscation over CLT13
Jean-Sébastien Coron, Moon Sung Lee, Tancrède Lepoint, Mehdi Tibouchi
Foundations
In this work, we describe a new polynomial-time attack on the multilinear maps of Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi (CLT13), when used in candidate iO schemes. More specifically, we show that given the obfuscation of the simple branching program that computes the always zero functionality previously considered by Miles, Sahai and Zhandry (Crypto 2016), one can recover the secret parameters of CLT13 in polynomial time via an extension of the zeroizing attack of Coron et al. (Crypto 2015). Our...
Cryptanalysis of Indistinguishability Obfuscations of Circuits over GGH13
Daniel Apon, Nico Döttling, Sanjam Garg, Pratyay Mukherjee
Annihilation attacks, introduced in the work of Miles, Sahai, and Zhandry (CRYPTO 2016), are a class of polynomial-time attacks against several candidate indistinguishability obfuscation ($i\mathcal{O}$) schemes, built from Garg, Gentry, and Halevi (EUROCRYPT 2013) multilinear maps. In this work, we provide a general efficiently-testable property of two branching programs, called ``partial inequivalence'', which we show is sufficient for our variant of annihilation attacks on several...
Revealing Encryption for Partial Ordering
Helene Haagh, Yue Ji, Chenxing Li, Claudio Orlandi, Yifan Song
We generalize the cryptographic notion of Order Revealing Encryption (ORE) to arbitrary functions and we present a construction that allows to determine the (partial) ordering of two vectors i.e., given E(x) and E(y) it is possible to learn whether x is less than or equal to y, y is less than or equal to x or whether x and y are incomparable. This is the first non-trivial example of a Revealing Encryption (RE) scheme with output larger than one bit, and which does not rely on cryptographic...
Short Stickelberger Class Relations and application to Ideal-SVP
Ronald Cramer, Léo Ducas, Benjamin Wesolowski
Public-key cryptography
The worst-case hardness of finding short vectors in ideals of cyclotomic number fields (Ideal-SVP) is a central matter in lattice based cryptography. Assuming the worst-case hardness of Ideal-SVP allows to prove the Ring-LWE and Ring-SIS assumptions, and therefore to prove the security of numerous cryptographic schemes and protocols --- including key-exchange, digital signatures, public-key encryption and fully-homomorphic encryption.
A series of recent works has shown that Principal...
Secure Obfuscation in a Weak Multilinear Map Model
Sanjam Garg, Eric Miles, Pratyay Mukherjee, Amit Sahai, Akshayaram Srinivasan, Mark Zhandry
All known candidate indistinguishibility obfuscation (iO) schemes rely on candidate multilinear maps. Until recently, the strongest proofs of security available for iO candidates were in a generic model that only allows "honest" use of the multilinear map. Most notably, in this model the zero-test procedure only reveals whether an encoded element is 0, and nothing more.
However, this model is inadequate: there have been several attacks on multilinear maps that exploit extra information...
Identity-Based Key Aggregate Cryptosystem from Multilinear Maps
Sikhar Patranabis, Debdeep Mukhopadhyay
Public-key cryptography
The key-aggregate cryptosystem~(KAC) proposed by Chu et al. in 2014 offers a solution to the flexible access delegation problem in shared data environments such as the cloud. KAC allows a data owner, owning $N$ classes of encrypted data, to securely grant access to any subset $S$ of these data classes among a subset $\hat{S}$ of data users, via a single low overhead \emph{aggregate key} $K_{\mathcal{S}}$. Existing constructions for KAC are efficient in so far they achieve constant size...
Reducing the Leakage in Practical Order-Revealing Encryption
David Cash, Feng-Hao Liu, Adam O'Neill, Cong Zhang
Applications
We study practical order-revealing encryption (ORE) with a well-defined leakage profile (the information revealed about the plaintexts from their ciphertexts), a direction recently initiated by Chenette, Lewi, Weis, and Wu (CLWW). ORE, which allows public comparison of plaintext order via their ciphertexts, is a useful tool in the design of secure outsourced database systems. We first show a general construction of ORE with reduced leakage as compared to CLWW, by combining ideas from their...
Function-Revealing Encryption
Marc Joye, Alain Passelègue
Multi-input functional encryption is a paradigm that allows an authorized user to compute a certain function---and nothing more---over multiple plaintexts given only their encryption. The particular case of two-input functional encryption has very exciting applications, including comparing the relative order of two plaintexts from their encrypted form (order-revealing encryption).
While being extensively studied, multi-input functional encryption is not ready for a practical deployment,...
5Gen: A Framework for Prototyping Applications Using Multilinear Maps and Matrix Branching Programs
Kevin Lewi, Alex J. Malozemoff, Daniel Apon, Brent Carmer, Adam Foltzer, Daniel Wagner, David W. Archer, Dan Boneh, Jonathan Katz, Mariana Raykova
Implementation
Secure multilinear maps (mmaps) have been shown to have remarkable
applications in cryptography, such as program obfuscation and multi-input
functional encryption (MIFE). To date, there has been little evaluation of
the performance of these applications. In this paper we initiate a systematic
study of mmap-based constructions. We build a general framework, called
5Gen, to experiment with these applications. At the top layer we develop an
optimizing compiler that takes in a high-level program...
Obfuscation from Low Noise Multilinear Maps
Nico Döttling, Sanjam Garg, Divya Gupta, Peihan Miao, Pratyay Mukherjee
Public-key cryptography
Multilinear maps enable homomorphic computation on encoded values and a public procedure to check if the computation on the encoded values results in a zero. Encodings in known candidate constructions of multilinear maps have a (growing) noise component, which is crucial for security. For example, noise in GGH13 multilinear maps grows with the number of levels that need to be supported and must remain below the maximal noise supported by the multilinear map for correctness. A smaller maximal...
Secure obfuscation in a weak multilinear map model: A simple construction secure against all known attacks
Eric Miles, Amit Sahai, Mark Zhandry
All known candidate indistinguishibility obfuscation (iO) schemes rely on candidate multilinear maps. Until recently, the strongest proofs of security available for iO candidates were in a generic model that only allows "honest" use of the multilinear map. Most notably, in this model the zero-test procedure only reveals whether an encoded element is 0, and nothing more.
However, this model is inadequate: there have been several attacks on multilinear maps that exploit extra information...
Functional Encryption: Deterministic to Randomized Functions from Simple Assumptions
Shashank Agrawal, David J. Wu
Public-key cryptography
Functional encryption (FE) enables fine-grained control of sensitive data by allowing users to only compute certain functions for which they have a key. The vast majority of work in FE has focused on deterministic functions, but for several applications such as privacy-aware auditing, differentially-private data release, proxy re-encryption, and more, the functionality of interest is more naturally captured by a randomized function. Recently, Goyal et al. (TCC 2015) initiated a formal study...
Obfuscation without the Vulnerabilities of Multilinear Maps
Sanjam Garg, Pratyay Mukherjee, Akshayaram Srinivasan
Public-key cryptography
Indistinguishability obfuscation is a central primitive in cryptography. Security of existing multilinear maps constructions on which current obfuscation candidates are based is poorly understood. In a few words, multilinear maps allow for checking if an arbitrary bounded degree polynomial on hidden values evaluates to zero or not. All known attacks on multilinear maps depend on the information revealed on computations that result in encodings of zero. This includes the recent annihilation...
Probability that the k-gcd of products of positive integers is B-friable
Jung Hee Cheon, Duhyeong Kim
In 1849, Dirichlet~\cite{D49} proved that the probability that two positive integers are relatively prime is 1/\zeta(2). Later, it was generalized into the case that positive integers has no nontrivial $k$th power common divisor.
In this paper, we further generalize this result: the probability that the gcd of m products of n positive integers is B-friable is \prod_{p>B}[1-{1-(1-\frac{1}{p})^{n}}^{m}] for m >= 2. We show that it is lower bounded by \frac{1}{\zeta(s)} for some s>1 if...
An Alternative View of the Graph-Induced Multilinear Maps
Yilei Chen
In this paper, we view multilinear maps through the lens of ``homomorphic obfuscation". In specific, we show how to homomorphically obfuscate the kernel-test and affine subspace-test functionalities of high dimensional matrices. Namely, the evaluator is able to perform additions and multiplications over the obfuscated matrices, and test subspace memberships on the resulting code. The homomorphic operations are constrained by the prescribed data structure, e.g. a tree or a graph, where the...
Annihilation Attacks for Multilinear Maps: Cryptanalysis of Indistinguishability Obfuscation over GGH13
Eric Miles, Amit Sahai, Mark Zhandry
In this work, we present a new class of polynomial-time attacks on the original multilinear maps of Garg, Gentry, and Halevi (2013). Previous polynomial-time attacks on GGH13 were “zeroizing” attacks that generally required the availability of low-level encodings of zero. Most significantly, such zeroizing attacks were not applicable to candidate indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) schemes. iO has been the subject of intense study.
To address this gap, we introduce annihilation attacks,...
An Algorithm for NTRU Problems and Cryptanalysis of the GGH Multilinear Map without a Low Level Encoding of Zero
Jung Hee Cheon, Jinhyuck Jeong, Changmin Lee
Let f and g be polynomials of a bounded Euclidean norm in the ring \Z[X]/< X^n+1>.
Given the polynomial [f/g]_q\in \Z_q[X]/< X^n+1>, the NTRU problem is to find a, b\in \Z[X]/< X^n+1> with a small Euclidean norm such that [a/b]_q = [f/g]_q.
We propose an algorithm to solve the NTRU problem, which runs in
2^{O(\log^{2} \lambda)} time
when ||g||, ||f||, and || g^{-1}|| are within some range. The main technique of our algorithm is the reduction of a problem on a field to one in a...
Cryptanalysis of the New CLT Multilinear Map over the Integers
Jung Hee Cheon, Pierre-Alain Fouque, Changmin Lee, Brice Minaud, Hansol Ryu
Public-key cryptography
Multilinear maps serve as a basis for a wide range of cryptographic applications. The first candidate construction of multilinear maps was proposed by Garg, Gentry, and Halevi in 2013, and soon afterwards, another construction was suggested by Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi (CLT13), which works over the integers. However, both of these were found to be insecure in the face of so-called zeroizing attacks, by Hu and Jia, and by Cheon, Han, Lee, Ryu and Stehlé. To improve on CLT13, Coron,...
A subfield lattice attack on overstretched NTRU assumptions: Cryptanalysis of some FHE and Graded Encoding Schemes
Martin Albrecht, Shi Bai, Léo Ducas
The subfield attack exploits the presence of a subfield to solve overstretched versions of the NTRU assumption: norming the public key $h$ down to a subfield may lead to an easier lattice problem and any sufficiently good solution may be lifted to a short vector in the full NTRU-lattice.
This approach was originally sketched in a paper of Gentry and Szydlo at Eurocrypt'02 and there also attributed to Jonsson, Nguyen and Stern. However, because it does not apply for small moduli and hence...
Obfuscation without Multilinear Maps
Dingfeng Ye, Peng Liu
Foundations
Known methods for obfuscating a circuit need to represent the circuit as a branching program and then use a multilinear map to encrypt the branching program. Multilinear maps are, however, too inefficient for encrypting the branching program. We found a dynamic encoding method which effectively singles out different inputs in the context
of the matrix randomization technique of Kilian and Gentry et al., so that multilinear maps are no longer needed. To make the method work, we need the...
Variation of GGH15 Multilinear Maps
Gu Chunsheng
Public-key cryptography
Recently, Coron presented an attack of GGH15 multilinear maps, which breaks the multipartite Diffie-Hellman key exchange protocol based on GGH15. In this paper, we describe a variation of GGH15, which seems to thwart known attacks.
Compact Attribute-Based Encryption and Signcryption for General Circuits from Multilinear Maps
Pratish Datta, Ratna Dutta, Sourav Mukhopadhyay
Public-key cryptography
Designing attribute-based systems supporting highly expressive access policies has been
one of the principal focus of research in attribute-based cryptography. While attribute-based encryption
(ABE) enables fine-grained access control over encrypted data in a multi-user environment,
attribute-based signature (ABS) provides a powerful tool for preserving signer anonymity. Attributebased
signcryption (ABSC), on the other hand, is a combination of ABE and ABS into a unified
cost-effective...
Constraining Pseudorandom Functions Privately
Dan Boneh, Kevin Lewi, David J. Wu
Secret-key cryptography
In a constrained pseudorandom function (PRF), the master secret key can be
used to derive constrained keys, where each constrained key k is constrained
with respect to some Boolean circuit C. A constrained key k can be used to
evaluate the PRF on all inputs x for which C(x) = 1. In almost all existing
constrained PRF constructions, the constrained key k reveals its constraint C.
In this paper we introduce the concept of private constrained PRFs, which
are constrained PRFs with the...
Practical Order-Revealing Encryption with Limited Leakage
Nathan Chenette, Kevin Lewi, Stephen A. Weis, David J. Wu
Secret-key cryptography
In an order-preserving encryption scheme, the encryption algorithm produces
ciphertexts that preserve the order of their plaintexts. Order-preserving
encryption schemes have been studied intensely in the last decade, and yet not
much is known about the security of these schemes. Very recently, Boneh
et al. (Eurocrypt 2015) introduced a generalization of order-preserving
encryption, called order-revealing encryption, and presented a construction
which achieves this notion with best-possible...
Cryptanalysis of GGH15 Multilinear Maps
Jean-Sebastien Coron, Moon Sung Lee, Tancrede Lepoint, Mehdi Tibouchi
We describe a cryptanalysis of the GGH15 multilinear maps. Our attack breaks in polynomial time the multipartite key-agreement protocol by generating an equivalent user private key. Our attack only applies to GGH15 without safeguards; for GGH15 with safeguards we only have a partial cryptanalysis that can recover any ratio of secret exponents. We also describe attacks against variants of the GGH13 multilinear maps proposed by Halevi (ePrint 2015/866) aiming at supporting graph-induced...
Security Analysis of Cryptosystems Using Short Generators over Ideal Lattices
Shinya Okumura, Shingo Sugiyama, Masaya Yasuda, Tsuyoshi Takagi
Public-key cryptography
In this paper, we analyze the security of cryptosystems using
short generators over ideal lattices such as candidate multilinear maps
by Garg, Gentry and Halevi and fully homomorphic encryption by Smart
and Vercauteren. Our approach is based on a recent work by Cramer,
Ducas, Peikert and Regev on analysis of recovering a short generator of
an ideal in the $q$-th cyclotomic field for a prime power $q$.
In their analysis, implicit lower bounds of the special values of Dirichlet $L$-functions...
Multilinear Map via Scale-Invariant FHE: Enhancing Security and Efficiency
Jinsu Kim, Sungwook Kim, Jae Hong Seo
Public-key cryptography
Cryptographic multilinear map is a useful tool for constructing numerous secure protocols and Graded Encoding System (GES) is an {\em approximate} concept of multilinear map. In multilinear map context, there are several important issues, mainly about security and efficiency. All early stage candidate multilinear maps are recently broken by so-called zeroizing attack, so that it is highly required to develop reliable mechanisms to prevent zeroizing attacks. Moreover, the encoding size in all...
2015/970
Last updated: 2015-12-12
Multilinear Maps over the Integers Using Modulus Switching
Gu Chunsheng
After CLT13 of multilinear map over the integers was broken by Cheon, Han, Lee, Ryu and Stehle using zeroizing attack, a new variant CLT15 of CLT13 was proposed by Coron, Lepoint and Tibouchi by constructing new zero-testing parameter. Very recently, CLT15 was broken independently by Cheon, Lee and Ryu, and Minaud and Fouque using an extension of Cheon et al.’s attack. To immune CLT13 against zeroizing attack, we present a new construction of multilinear map over the integers using switching...
Online-Offline Homomorphic Signatures for Polynomial Functions
Kaoutar Elkhiyaoui, Melek Önen, Refik Molva
Cryptographic protocols
The advent of cloud computing has given rise to a plethora of
work on verifiable delegation of computation. Homomorphic signatures are powerful tools that can be tailored for verifiable computation, as long as they are efficiently verifiable. The main advantages of homomorphic signatures for verifiable computation are twofold:
\begin{inparaenum}[(i)]
\item Any third party can verify the correctness of the delegated computation,
\item and this third party is not required to have access to...
Cryptanalysis of the New Multilinear Map over the Integers
Brice Minaud, Pierre-Alain Fouque
This article describes a polynomial attack on the new multilinear map over the integers presented by Coron, Lepoint and Tibouchi at CRYPTO 2015 (CLT15). This version is a fix of the first multilinear map over the integers presented by the same authors at CRYPTO 2013 (CLT13) and broken by Cheon et al. at EUROCRYPT 2015. The attack essentially downgrades CLT15 to its original version CLT13, and leads to a full break of the multilinear map for virtually all applications. In addition to the...
Lattice Based Cryptography for Beginners
Dong Pyo Chi, Jeong Woon Choi, Jeong San Kim, Taewan Kim
The purpose of this lecture note is to introduce lattice based cryptography, which is thought to be a cryptosystem of post-quantum age. We have tried to give as many details possible specially for novice on the subject. Something may be trivial to an expert but not to a novice. Many fundamental problems about lattice are thought to be hard even against quantum computer, compared to factorization problem which can be solved easily with quantum computer, via the celebrated Shor factorization...
Cryptanalysis of the New CLT Multilinear Maps
Jung Hee Cheon, Changmin Lee, Hansol Ryu
Multilinear maps have many cryptographic applications. The first
candidate construction of multilinear maps was proposed by Garg,
Gentry, and Halevi (GGH13) in 2013, and soon afterwards, another
candidate was suggested by Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi (CLT13)
that works over the integers. However, both of these were found to
be insecure in the face of a so-called zeroizing attack (HJ15,
CHL+15). To improve on CLT13, Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi
proposed another candidate of new multilinear...
We construct the first multi-input functional encryption (MIFE) and indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) schemes for pseudorandom functionalities, where the output of the functionality is pseudorandom for every input seen by the adversary. Our MIFE scheme relies on LWE and evasive LWE (Wee, Eurocrypt 2022 and Tsabary, Crypto 2022) for constant arity functions, and a strengthening of evasive LWE for polynomial arity. Thus, we obtain the first MIFE and iO schemes for a nontrivial...
This paper introduces a heuristic ideal obfuscation scheme grounded in the lattice problems, which differs from that proposed by Jain, Lin, and Luo ([JLLW23], CRYPTO 2023). The approach in this paper follows a methodology akin to that of Brakerski, Dottling, Garg, and Malavolta ([BDGM20], EUROCRYPT 2020) for building indistinguishable obfuscation (iO). The proposal is achieved by leveraging a variant of learning with rounding (LWR) to build linearly homomorphic encryption (LHE) and employing...
zkSNARK is a cryptographic primitive that allows a prover to prove to a resource constrained verifier, that it has indeed performed a specified non-deterministic computation correctly, while hiding private witnesses. In this work we focus on lattice based zkSNARK, as this serves two important design goals. Firstly, we get post-quantum zkSNARK schemes with $O(\log (\mbox{Circuit size}))$ sized proofs (without random oracles) and secondly, the easy verifier circuit allows further...
LV16/Lin17 IO schemes are famous progresses towards simplifying obfuscation mechanism. In fact, these two schemes only constructed two compact functional encryption (CFE) algorithms, while other things were taken to the AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame. CFE algorithms are inserted into the AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame to form a complete IO scheme. We stated the invalidity of LV16/Lin17 IO schemes. More detailedly, under reasonable assumption “real white box (RWB)” LV16/Lin17 CFE algorithms...
Witness encryption is a generalization of public-key encryption where the public key can be any NP statement x and the associated decryption key is any witness w for x. While early constructions of witness encryption relied on multilinear maps and indistinguishability obfuscation (iO), recent works have provided direct constructions of witness encryption that are more efficient than iO (and also seem unlikely to yield iO). Motivated by this progress, we revisit the possibility of using...
Indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) is at the frontier of cryptography research for several years. LV16/Lin17 obfuscation schemes are famous progresses towards simplifying obfuscation mechanism. In fact, these two schemes only constructed two compact functional encryption (CFE) algorithms, while other things were taken to AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame. That is, CFE algorithms are inserted into AJ15 IO frame or BV15 IO frame to form a complete IO scheme. The basic structure of two CFE...
A private puncturable pseudorandom function (PRF) enables one to create a constrained version of a PRF key, which can be used to evaluate the PRF at all but some punctured points. In addition, the constrained key reveals no information about the punctured points and the PRF values on them. Existing constructions of private puncturable PRFs are only proven to be secure against a restricted adversary that must commit to the punctured points before viewing any information. It is an open problem...
We define the membership function of a set as the function that determines whether an input is an element of the set. Canetti, Rothblum, and Varia showed how to obfuscate evasive membership functions of hyperplanes over a finite field of order an exponentially large prime, assuming the hardness of a modified decisional Diffie-Hellman problem. Barak, Bitansky, Canetti, Kalai, Paneth, and Sahai extended their work from hyperplanes to hypersurfaces of bounded degree, assuming multilinear maps....
Functional Commitments (FC) allow one to reveal functions of committed data in a succinct and verifiable way. In this paper we put forward the notion of additive-homomorphic FC and show two efficient, pairing-based, realizations of this primitive supporting multivariate polynomials of constant degree and monotone span programs, respectively. We also show applications of the new primitive in the contexts of homomorphic signatures: we show that additive-homomorphic FCs can be used to realize...
Indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) is at the frontier of cryptography research. Lin16/Lin17 obfuscation schemes are famous progresses towards simplifying obfuscation mechanism. Their basic structure can be described in the following way: to obfuscate a polynomial-time-computable Boolean function $c(x)$, first divide it into a group of component functions with low-degree and low-locality by using randomized encoding, and then hide the shapes of these component functions by using...
Kahrobaei, Tortora, Tota showed how, to any nilpotent group of class n, one can associate a non-interactive key exchange protocol between n+1 users. The multilinear commutator maps associated to nilpotent groups play a key role in this protocol. In the present paper, we explore some alternative platforms, such as pro-p groups.
In a lockable obfuscation scheme, a party called the obfuscator takes as input a circuit C, a lock value y and, a message m, and outputs an obfuscated circuit. Given the obfuscated circuit, an evaluator can run it on an input x and learn the message if C(x) = y. For security, we require that the obfuscation reveals no information on the circuit as long as the lock y has high entropy even given the circuit C. The only known constructions of lockable obfuscation schemes require...
The notion of functional encryption (FE) was proposed as a generalization of plain public-key encryption to enable a much more fine-grained handling of encrypted data, with advanced applications such as cloud computing, multi-party computations, obfuscating circuits or Turing machines. While FE for general circuits or Turing machines gives a natural instantiation of the many cryptographic primitives, existing FE schemes are based on indistinguishability obfuscation or multilinear maps which...
Multi-Party Non-Interactive Key Exchange (MP-NIKE) is a fundamental cryptographic primitive in which users register into a key generation centre and receive a public/private key pair each. After that, any subset of these users can compute a shared key without any interaction. Nowadays, IoT devices suffer from a high number and large size of messages exchanged in the Key Management Protocol (KMP). To overcome this, an MP-NIKE scheme can eliminate the airtime and latency of messages...
Though the multilinear maps have many cryptographic applications, secure and efficient construction of such maps is an open problem. Many multilinear maps like GGH, GGH15, CLT, and CLT15 have been and are being proposed, while none of them is both secure and efficient. The construction of some multilinear maps is based on the Graded Encoding Scheme (GES), where, the necessity of announcing zero-testing parameter and encoding of zero has destroyed the security of the multilinear map. Attempt...
Applying access structure to encrypted sensitive data is one of the challenges in communication networks and cloud computing. Various methods have been proposed to achieve this goal, one of the most interesting of which is Attribute-Based Encryption (ABE). In ABE schemes, the access structure, which is defined as a policy, can be applied to the key or ciphertext. Thus, if the policy is applied to the key, it is called the Key Policy Attribute-Based Encryption (KP-ABE), and on the other hand,...
In a witness encryption scheme, to decrypt a ciphertext associated with an NP statement, the decrypter takes as input a witness testifying that the statement is in the language. When the statement is not in the language, then the message is hidden. Thus far, the only provably secure constructions assume the existence of indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) and multilinear maps (MMaps). We make progress towards building polynomially efficient witness encryption for NP without resorting to...
Broadcast Encryption with optimal parameters was a long-standing problem, whose first solution was provided in an elegant work by Boneh, Waters and Zhandry [BWZ14]. However, this work relied on multilinear maps of logarithmic degree, which is not considered a standard assumption. Recently, Agrawal and Yamada [AY20] improved this state of affairs by providing the first construction of optimal broadcast encryption from Bilinear Maps and Learning With Errors (LWE). However, their proof of...
As both notions employ the same key-evolution paradigm, Bellare \emph{et al.} (CANS 2017) study combining forward security with leakage resilience. The idea is for forward security to serve as a hedge in case at some point the full key gets exposed from the leakage. In particular, Bellare \emph{et al.} combine forward security with \emph{continual} leakage resilience, dubbed FS+CL. Our first result improves on Bellare \emph{et al.}'s FS+CL secure PKE scheme by building one from any...
We consider the problem of recovering the entries of diagonal matrices $\{U_a\}_a$ for $a = 1,\ldots,t$ from multiple ``incomplete'' samples $\{W_a\}_a$ of the form $W_a=PU_aQ$, where $P$ and $Q$ are unknown matrices of low rank. We devise practical algorithms for this problem depending on the ranks of $P$ and $Q$. This problem finds its motivation in cryptanalysis: we show how to significantly improve previous algorithms for solving the approximate common divisor problem and breaking CLT13...
We show how to construct new multilinear maps from subexponentially secure indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) and standard assumptions. In particular, we show how to construct multilinear maps with arbitrary predetermined degree of multilinearity where each of the following assumptions hold: SXDH, exponent-DDH (for both symmetric and asymmetric multilinear maps), and all other assumptions implied by these assumptions (including k-party-DDH and k-Lin and its variants). Our constructions...
Candidates of Indistinguishability Obfuscation (iO) can be categorized as ``direct'' or ``bootstrapping based''. Direct constructions rely on high degree multilinear maps [GGH13,GGHRSW13] and provide heuristic guarantees, while bootstrapping based constructions [LV16,Lin17,LT17,AJLMS19,Agr19,JLMS19] rely, in the best case, on bilinear maps as well as new variants of the Learning With Errors (LWE) assumption and pseudorandom generators. Recent times have seen exciting progress in the...
Boneh, Waters and Zhandry (CRYPTO 2014) used multilinear maps to provide a solution to the long-standing problem of public-key broadcast encryption (BE) where all parameters in the system are small. In this work, we improve their result by providing a solution that uses only bilinear maps and Learning With Errors (LWE). Our scheme is fully collusion-resistant against any number of colluders, and can be generalized to an identity-based broadcast system with short parameters. Thus, we reclaim...
We propose a candidate ciphertext-policy attribute-based encryption (CP-ABE) scheme for circuits, where the ciphertext size depends only on the depth of the policy circuit (and not its size). This, in particular, gives us a Broadcast Encryption (BE) scheme where the size of the keys and ciphertexts have a poly-logarithmic dependence on the number of users. This goal was previously only known to be achievable assuming ideal multilinear maps (Boneh, Waters and Zhandry, Crypto 2014) or...
The first construction of Witness Encryption (WE) by Garg et al. (STOC 2013) has led to many exciting avenues of research in the past years. A particularly interesting variant is Offline WE (OWE) by Abusalah et al. (ACNS 2016), as the encryption algorithm uses neither obfuscation nor multilinear maps. Current OWE schemes provide only selective security. That is, the adversary must commit to their challenge messages $m_0$ and $m_1$ before seeing the public parameters. We provide a new,...
The existence of secure indistinguishability obfuscators ($i\mathcal{O}$) has far-reaching implications, significantly expanding the scope of problems amenable to cryptographic study. A recent line of work [Ananth, Jain, and Sahai, 2018; Aggrawal, 2018; Lin and Matt, 2018; Jain, Lin, Matt, and Sahai, 2019] has developed a new theory for building $i\mathcal{O}$~from simpler building blocks, and represents the state of the art in constructing $i\mathcal{O}$~from succinct and...
In a traitor tracing (TT) system for $n$ users, every user has his/her own secret key. Content providers can encrypt messages using a public key, and each user can decrypt the ciphertext using his/her secret key. Suppose some of the $n$ users collude to construct a pirate decoding box. Then the tracing scheme has a special algorithm, called $Trace$, which can identify at least one of the secret keys used to construct the pirate decoding box. Traditionally, the trace algorithm output only...
As an extension of identity-based encryption (IBE), revocable hierarchical IBE (RHIBE) supports both key revocation and key delegation simultaneously, which are two important functionalities for cryptographic use in practice. Recently in PKC 2019, Katsumata et al. constructed the first lattice-based RHIBE scheme with decryption key exposure resistance (DKER). Such constructions are all based on bilinear or multilinear maps before their work. In this paper, we simplify the construction of...
Functional encryption (FE) that bases on user attributes has many useful practical applications. For example, a company may only authorize department heads of other sections to query the average sale figures of the sales department from the encrypted sales amounts of all sales. However, FE schemes that can solve this problem are based on new, but not well-studied assumptions (such as indistinguishable obfuscation or multilinear maps). It is not clear if these FE schemes are secure. In this...
The existence of secure indistinguishability obfuscators (iO) has far-reaching implications, significantly expanding the scope of problems amenable to cryptographic study. All known approaches to constructing iO rely on $d$-linear maps. While secure bilinear maps are well established in cryptographic literature, the security of candidates for $d>2$ is poorly understood. We propose a new approach to constructing iO for general circuits. Unlike all previously known realizations of iO, we...
Constructing Attribute Based Encryption (ABE) [SW05] for uniform models of computation from standard assumptions, is an important problem, about which very little is known. The only known ABE schemes in this setting that i) avoid reliance on multilinear maps or indistinguishability obfuscation, ii) support unbounded length inputs and iii) permit unbounded key requests to the adversary in the security game, are by Waters from Crypto, 2012 [Wat12] and its variants. Waters provided the first...
We construct a delegation scheme for all polynomial time computations. Our scheme is publicly verifiable and completely non-interactive in the common reference string (CRS) model. Our scheme is based on an efficiently falsifiable decisional assumption on groups with bilinear maps. Prior to this work, publicly verifiable non-interactive delegation schemes were only known under knowledge assumptions (or in the Random Oracle model) or under non-standard assumptions related to obfuscation or...
Two standard security properties of a non-interactive zero-knowledge (NIZK) scheme are soundness and zero-knowledge. But while standard NIZK systems can only provide one of those properties against unbounded adversaries, dual-mode NIZK systems allow to choose dynamically and adaptively which of these properties holds unconditionally. The only known dual-mode NIZK systems are Groth-Sahai proofs (which have proved extremely useful in a variety of applications), and the FHE-based NIZK...
Many constructions based on multilinear maps require independent slots in the plaintext, so that multiple computations can be performed in parallel over the slots. Such constructions are usually based on CLT13 multilinear maps, since CLT13 inherently provides a composite encoding space. However, a vulnerability was identified at Crypto 2014 by Gentry, Lewko and Waters, with a lattice-based attack in dimension 2, and the authors have suggested a simple countermeasure. In this paper, we...
The Winternitz one-time signature (WOTS) scheme, which can be described using a certain number of so-called ``function chains", plays an important role in the design of both stateless and stateful many-time signature schemes. This work introduces WOTS^GES, a new WOTS type signature scheme in which the need for computing all of the intermediate values of the chains is eliminated. This significantly reduces the number of required operations needed to calculate the algorithms of WOTS^GES. To...
Indistinguishability obfuscation constructions based on matrix branching programs generally proceed in two steps: first apply Kilian's randomization of the matrix product computation, and then encode the matrices using a multilinear map scheme. In this paper we observe that by applying Kilian's randomization after encoding, the complexity of the best attacks is significantly increased for CLT13 multilinear maps. This implies that much smaller parameters can be used, which improves the...
Constrained pseudorandom functions (CPRFs) allow learning "constrained" PRF keys that can evaluate the PRF on a subset of the input space, or based on some sort of predicate. First introduced by Boneh and Waters [AC'13], Kiayias et al. [CCS'13] and Boyle et al. [PKC'14], they have been shown to be a useful cryptographic primitive with many applications. The full security definition of CPRFs requires the adversary to learn multiple constrained keys in an arbitrary order, a requirement for...
Constrained pseudorandom functions (CPRFs) allow learning modified PRF keys that can evaluate the PRF on a subset of the input space, or based on some sort of predicate. First introduced by Boneh and Waters [Asiacrypt 2013], they have been shown to be a useful cryptographic primitive with many applications. The full security definition of CPRFs requires the adversary to learn multiple constrained keys, a requirement for all of these applications. Unfortunately, existing constructions of...
We describe obfuscation schemes for matrix-product branching programs that are purely algebraic and employ matrix groups and tensor algebra over a finite field. In contrast to the obfuscation schemes of Garg et al (SICOM 2016) which were based on multilinear maps, these schemes do not use noisy encodings. We prove that there is no efficient attack on our scheme based on re-linearization techniques of Kipnis-Shamir (CRYPTO 99) and its generalization called XL-methodology (Courtois et al,...
We describe a framework for constructing an efficient non-interactive key exchange (NIKE) protocol for n parties for any n >= 2. Our approach is based on the problem of computing isogenies between isogenous elliptic curves, which is believed to be difficult. We do not obtain a working protocol because of a missing step that is currently an open problem. What we need to complete our protocol is an efficient algorithm that takes as input an abelian variety presented as a product of...
We introduce Pseudo Flawed-smudging Generators (PFGs). A PFG is an expanding function whose outputs $\mathbf Y$ satisfy a weak form of pseudo-randomness. Roughly speaking, for some polynomial bound $B$, and every distribution $\chi$ over $B$-bounded noise vectors, it guarantees that the distribution of $(\mathbf e,\ \mathbf Y + \mathbf e)$ is indistinguishable from that of $(\mathbf e', \mathbf Y + \mathbf e)$, where $\mathbf e \gets \chi$ is a random sample from $\chi$, and $\mathbf e'$ is...
Constructing indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) [BGI+01] is a central open question in cryptography. We provide new methods to make progress towards this goal. Our contributions may be summarized as follows: 1. {\textbf Bootstrapping}. In a recent work, Lin and Tessaro [LT17] (LT) show that iO may be constructed using i) Functional Encryption (FE) for polynomials of degree $L$ , ii) Pseudorandom Generators (PRG) with blockwise locality $L$ and polynomial expansion, and iii) Learning With...
The existence of secure indistinguishability obfuscators (iO) has far-reaching implications, significantly expanding the scope of problems amenable to cryptographic study. All known approaches to constructing iO rely on $d$-linear maps which allow the encoding of elements from a large domain, evaluating degree $d$ polynomials on them, and testing if the output is zero. While secure bilinear maps are well established in cryptographic literature, the security of candidates for $d>2$ is poorly...
Witness pseudorandom functions (witness PRFs) generate a pseudorandom value corresponding to an instance x of an NP language and the same pseudorandom value can be recomputed if a witness w that x is in the language is known. Zhandry (TCC 2016) introduced the idea of witness PRFs and gave a construction using multilinear maps. Witness PRFs can be interconnected with the recent powerful cryptographic primitive called witness encryption. In witness encryption, a message can be encrypted with...
The GGH15 multilinear maps have served as the foundation for a number of cutting-edge cryptographic proposals. Unfortunately, many schemes built on GGH15 have been explicitly broken by so-called ``zeroizing attacks,'' which exploit leakage from honest zero-test queries. The precise settings in which zeroizing attacks are possible have remained unclear. Most notably, none of the current indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) candidates from GGH15 have any formal security guarantees against...
Private linear key agreement (PLKA) enables a group of users to agree upon a common session key in a broadcast encryption (BE) scenario, while traitor tracing (TT) system allows a tracer to identify conspiracy of a troop of colluding pirate users. This paper introduces a key encapsulation mechanism in BE that provides the functionalities of both PLKA and TT in a unified cost-effective primitive. Our PLKA based traitor tracing offers a solution to the problem of achieving full collusion...
In this paper, we propose cryptanalyses of all existing indistinguishability obfuscation ($iO$) candidates based on branching programs (BP) over GGH13 multilinear map for all recommended parameter settings. To achieve this, we introduce two novel techniques, program converting using NTRU-solver and matrix zeroizing, which can be applied to a wide range of obfuscation constructions and BPs compared to previous attacks. We then prove that, for the suggested parameters, the existing...
Garg, Gentry and Halevi (GGH13) described the first candidate multilinear maps using ideal lattices. However, Hu and Jia recently presented an efficient attack on the GGH13 map, which breaks the multipartite key exchange (MPKE) and witness encryption (WE) based on GGH13. In this work, we describe a new variant of GGH13 using secret ring, which preserves the origin functionality of GGH13. The security of our variant depends upon the following new hardness problem. Given the determinant of the...
We give a simple and efficient method for obfuscating pattern matching with wildcards. In other words, we construct a way to check an input against a secret pattern, which is described in terms of prescribed values interspersed with unconstrained “wildcard” slots. As long as the support of the pattern is sufficiently sparse and the pattern itself is chosen from an appropriate distribution, we prove that a polynomial-time adversary cannot find a matching input, except with negligible...
We construct a graded encoding scheme (GES), an approximate form of graded multilinear maps. Our construction relies on indistinguishability obfuscation, and a pairing-friendly group in which (a suitable variant of) the strong Diffie--Hellman assumption holds. As a result of this abstract approach, our GES has a number of advantages over previous constructions. Most importantly: a) We can prove that the multilinear decisional Diffie--Hellman (MDDH) assumption holds in our setting, assuming...
Recently, Albrecht, Davidson and Larraia described a variant of the GGH13 without ideals and presented the distinguishing attacks in simplified branching program security model. Their result partially demonstrates that there seems to be a structural defect in the GGH13 encoding that is not related to the ideal $\langle g \rangle$. However, it is not clear whether a variant of the CGH attack described by Chen, Gentry and Halevi can be used to break a branching program obfuscator instantiated...
An Order-Revealing Encryption (ORE) scheme gives a public procedure by which two ciphertexts can be compared to reveal the order of their underlying plaintexts. The ideal security notion for ORE is that \emph{only} the order is revealed --- anything else, such as the distance between plaintexts, is hidden. The only known constructions of ORE achieving such ideal security are based on cryptographic multilinear maps and are currently too impractical for real-world applications. In this work,...
All known multilinear map candidates have suffered from a class of attacks known as ``zeroizing'' attacks, which render them unusable for many applications. We provide a new construction of polynomial-degree multilinear maps and show that our scheme is provably immune to zeroizing attacks under a strengthening of the Branching Program Un-Annihilatability Assumption (Garg et al., TCC 2016-B). Concretely, we build our scheme on top of the CLT13 multilinear maps (Coron et al., CRYPTO 2013). ...
We investigate the merits of altering the Garg, Gentry and Halevi (GGH13) graded encoding scheme to remove the presence of the ideal \(\langle g \rangle\). In particular, we show that we can alter the form of encodings so that effectively a new \(g_i\) is used for each source group \(\mathbb{G}_i\), while retaining correctness. This would appear to prevent all known attacks on indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) candidates instantiated using GGH13. However, when analysing security in...
Indistinguishability obfuscation (IO) enables many heretofore out-of-reach applications in cryptography. However, currently all known constructions of IO are based on multilinear maps which are poorly understood. Hence, tremendous research effort has been put towards basing obfuscation on better-understood computational assumptions. Recently, another path to IO has emerged through functional encryption [Anath and Jain, CRYPTO 2015; Bitansky and Vaikuntanathan, FOCS 2015] but such FE schemes...
Due to the vast number of successful related-key attacks against existing block-ciphers, related-key security has become a common design goal for such primitives. In these attacks, the adversary is not only capable of seeing the output of a function on inputs of its choice, but also on related keys. At Crypto 2010, Bellare and Cash proposed the first construction of a pseudorandom function that could provably withstand such attacks based on standard assumptions. Their construction, as well...
At EUROCRYPT 2013, Garg, Gentry and Halevi proposed a candidate construction (later referred as GGH13) of cryptographic multilinear map (MMap). Despite weaknesses uncovered by Hu and Jia (EUROCRYPT 2016), this candidate is still used for designing obfuscators. The naive version of the GGH13 scheme was deemed susceptible to averaging attacks, i.e., it could suffer from a statistical leak (yet no precise attack was described). A variant was therefore devised, but it remains heuristic....
GGH13, CLT13 and GGH15 of multilinear maps suffer from zeroizing attacks. In this paper, we present a new construction of multilinear maps using a variant of ring-LWE (vRLWE). Furthermore, we also present two new variants of vRLWE, which respectively support the applications of multipartite key exchange and witness encryption. At the same time, we also present a new variant of GGH13 using matrix form. The security of our construction depends upon new hardness assumptions.
We consider the question of finding the lowest degree $L$ for which $L$-linear maps suffice to obtain IO. The current state of the art (Lin, EUROCRYPT'16, CRYPTO '17; Lin and Vaikunthanathan, FOCS'16; Ananth and Sahai, EUROCRYPT '17) is that $L$-linear maps (under suitable security assumptions) suffice for IO, assuming the existence of pseudo-random generators (PRGs) with output locality $L$. However, these works cannot answer the question of whether $L < 5$ suffices, as no...
Succinct non-interactive arguments (SNARGs) enable verifying NP computations with substantially lower complexity than that required for classical NP verification. In this work, we first construct a lattice-based SNARG candidate with quasi-optimal succinctness (where the argument size is quasilinear in the security parameter). Further extension of our methods yields the first SNARG (from any assumption) that is quasi-optimal in terms of both prover overhead (polylogarithmic in the security...
Constraint-hiding constrained PRFs (CHCPRFs), initially studied by Boneh, Lewi, and Wu [PKC 2017], are constrained PRFs where the constrained key hides the description of the constraint. Envisioned with powerful applications such as searchable encryption, private-detectable watermarking, and symmetric deniable encryption, the only known candidates of CHCPRFs are based on indistinguishability obfuscation or multilinear maps with strong security properties. In this paper, we construct CHCPRFs...
In this work we separate private-key semantic security from circular security using the Learning with Error assumption. Prior works used the less standard assumptions of multilinear maps or indistinguishability obfuscation. To achieve our results we develop new techniques for obliviously evaluating branching programs.
We implemented (a simplified version of) the branching-program obfuscator due to Gentry et al. (GGH15), which is itself a variation of the first obfuscation candidate by Garg et al. (GGHRSW13). To keep within the realm of feasibility, we had to give up on some aspects of the construction, specifically the ``multiplicative bundling'' factors that protect against mixed-input attacks. Hence our implementation can only support read-once branching programs. To be able to handle anything more...
A puncturable pseudorandom function (PRF) has a master key $k$ that enables one to evaluate the PRF at all points of the domain, and has a punctured key $k_x$ that enables one to evaluate the PRF at all points but one. The punctured key $k_x$ reveals no information about the value of the PRF at the punctured point $x$. Punctured PRFs play an important role in cryptography, especially in applications of indistinguishability obfuscation. However, in previous constructions, the punctured key...
We propose a new generic framework for constructing fully secure attribute based encryption (ABE) in multilinear settings. It is applicable in a generic manner to any predicates. Previous generic frameworks of this kind are given only in bilinear group settings, where applicable predicate classes are limited. Our framework provides an abstraction of dual system paradigms over composite-order graded multilinear encoding schemes in a black-box manner. As applications, we propose new fully...
In this work, we propose a variant of functional encryption called projective arithmetic functional encryption (PAFE). Roughly speaking, our notion is like functional encryption for arithmetic circuits, but where secret keys only yield partially decrypted values. These partially decrypted values can be linearly combined with known coefficients and the result can be tested to see if it is a small value. We give a degree-preserving construction of PAFE from multilinear maps. That is, we show...
Two recent works [Lin, EUROCRYPT 2016, Lin and Vaikuntanathan, FOCS 2016] showed how to construct Indistinguishability Obfuscation (IO) from constant degree multilinear maps. However, the concrete degrees of multilinear maps used in their constructions exceed 30. In this work, we reduce the degree of multilinear maps needed to 5, by giving a new construction of IO from asymmetric $L$-linear maps and a pseudo-random generator (PRG) with output locality $L$ and polynomial stretch. When...
We describe a defense against zeroizing attacks on indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) over the CLT13 multilinear map construction that only causes an additive blowup in the size of the branching program. This defense even applies to the most recent extension of the attack by Coron et al. (ePrint 2016), under which a much larger class of branching programs is vulnerable. To accomplish this, we describe an attack model for the current attacks on iO over CLT13 by distilling an essential...
In this work, we describe a new polynomial-time attack on the multilinear maps of Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi (CLT13), when used in candidate iO schemes. More specifically, we show that given the obfuscation of the simple branching program that computes the always zero functionality previously considered by Miles, Sahai and Zhandry (Crypto 2016), one can recover the secret parameters of CLT13 in polynomial time via an extension of the zeroizing attack of Coron et al. (Crypto 2015). Our...
Annihilation attacks, introduced in the work of Miles, Sahai, and Zhandry (CRYPTO 2016), are a class of polynomial-time attacks against several candidate indistinguishability obfuscation ($i\mathcal{O}$) schemes, built from Garg, Gentry, and Halevi (EUROCRYPT 2013) multilinear maps. In this work, we provide a general efficiently-testable property of two branching programs, called ``partial inequivalence'', which we show is sufficient for our variant of annihilation attacks on several...
We generalize the cryptographic notion of Order Revealing Encryption (ORE) to arbitrary functions and we present a construction that allows to determine the (partial) ordering of two vectors i.e., given E(x) and E(y) it is possible to learn whether x is less than or equal to y, y is less than or equal to x or whether x and y are incomparable. This is the first non-trivial example of a Revealing Encryption (RE) scheme with output larger than one bit, and which does not rely on cryptographic...
The worst-case hardness of finding short vectors in ideals of cyclotomic number fields (Ideal-SVP) is a central matter in lattice based cryptography. Assuming the worst-case hardness of Ideal-SVP allows to prove the Ring-LWE and Ring-SIS assumptions, and therefore to prove the security of numerous cryptographic schemes and protocols --- including key-exchange, digital signatures, public-key encryption and fully-homomorphic encryption. A series of recent works has shown that Principal...
All known candidate indistinguishibility obfuscation (iO) schemes rely on candidate multilinear maps. Until recently, the strongest proofs of security available for iO candidates were in a generic model that only allows "honest" use of the multilinear map. Most notably, in this model the zero-test procedure only reveals whether an encoded element is 0, and nothing more. However, this model is inadequate: there have been several attacks on multilinear maps that exploit extra information...
The key-aggregate cryptosystem~(KAC) proposed by Chu et al. in 2014 offers a solution to the flexible access delegation problem in shared data environments such as the cloud. KAC allows a data owner, owning $N$ classes of encrypted data, to securely grant access to any subset $S$ of these data classes among a subset $\hat{S}$ of data users, via a single low overhead \emph{aggregate key} $K_{\mathcal{S}}$. Existing constructions for KAC are efficient in so far they achieve constant size...
We study practical order-revealing encryption (ORE) with a well-defined leakage profile (the information revealed about the plaintexts from their ciphertexts), a direction recently initiated by Chenette, Lewi, Weis, and Wu (CLWW). ORE, which allows public comparison of plaintext order via their ciphertexts, is a useful tool in the design of secure outsourced database systems. We first show a general construction of ORE with reduced leakage as compared to CLWW, by combining ideas from their...
Multi-input functional encryption is a paradigm that allows an authorized user to compute a certain function---and nothing more---over multiple plaintexts given only their encryption. The particular case of two-input functional encryption has very exciting applications, including comparing the relative order of two plaintexts from their encrypted form (order-revealing encryption). While being extensively studied, multi-input functional encryption is not ready for a practical deployment,...
Secure multilinear maps (mmaps) have been shown to have remarkable applications in cryptography, such as program obfuscation and multi-input functional encryption (MIFE). To date, there has been little evaluation of the performance of these applications. In this paper we initiate a systematic study of mmap-based constructions. We build a general framework, called 5Gen, to experiment with these applications. At the top layer we develop an optimizing compiler that takes in a high-level program...
Multilinear maps enable homomorphic computation on encoded values and a public procedure to check if the computation on the encoded values results in a zero. Encodings in known candidate constructions of multilinear maps have a (growing) noise component, which is crucial for security. For example, noise in GGH13 multilinear maps grows with the number of levels that need to be supported and must remain below the maximal noise supported by the multilinear map for correctness. A smaller maximal...
All known candidate indistinguishibility obfuscation (iO) schemes rely on candidate multilinear maps. Until recently, the strongest proofs of security available for iO candidates were in a generic model that only allows "honest" use of the multilinear map. Most notably, in this model the zero-test procedure only reveals whether an encoded element is 0, and nothing more. However, this model is inadequate: there have been several attacks on multilinear maps that exploit extra information...
Functional encryption (FE) enables fine-grained control of sensitive data by allowing users to only compute certain functions for which they have a key. The vast majority of work in FE has focused on deterministic functions, but for several applications such as privacy-aware auditing, differentially-private data release, proxy re-encryption, and more, the functionality of interest is more naturally captured by a randomized function. Recently, Goyal et al. (TCC 2015) initiated a formal study...
Indistinguishability obfuscation is a central primitive in cryptography. Security of existing multilinear maps constructions on which current obfuscation candidates are based is poorly understood. In a few words, multilinear maps allow for checking if an arbitrary bounded degree polynomial on hidden values evaluates to zero or not. All known attacks on multilinear maps depend on the information revealed on computations that result in encodings of zero. This includes the recent annihilation...
In 1849, Dirichlet~\cite{D49} proved that the probability that two positive integers are relatively prime is 1/\zeta(2). Later, it was generalized into the case that positive integers has no nontrivial $k$th power common divisor. In this paper, we further generalize this result: the probability that the gcd of m products of n positive integers is B-friable is \prod_{p>B}[1-{1-(1-\frac{1}{p})^{n}}^{m}] for m >= 2. We show that it is lower bounded by \frac{1}{\zeta(s)} for some s>1 if...
In this paper, we view multilinear maps through the lens of ``homomorphic obfuscation". In specific, we show how to homomorphically obfuscate the kernel-test and affine subspace-test functionalities of high dimensional matrices. Namely, the evaluator is able to perform additions and multiplications over the obfuscated matrices, and test subspace memberships on the resulting code. The homomorphic operations are constrained by the prescribed data structure, e.g. a tree or a graph, where the...
In this work, we present a new class of polynomial-time attacks on the original multilinear maps of Garg, Gentry, and Halevi (2013). Previous polynomial-time attacks on GGH13 were “zeroizing” attacks that generally required the availability of low-level encodings of zero. Most significantly, such zeroizing attacks were not applicable to candidate indistinguishability obfuscation (iO) schemes. iO has been the subject of intense study. To address this gap, we introduce annihilation attacks,...
Let f and g be polynomials of a bounded Euclidean norm in the ring \Z[X]/< X^n+1>. Given the polynomial [f/g]_q\in \Z_q[X]/< X^n+1>, the NTRU problem is to find a, b\in \Z[X]/< X^n+1> with a small Euclidean norm such that [a/b]_q = [f/g]_q. We propose an algorithm to solve the NTRU problem, which runs in 2^{O(\log^{2} \lambda)} time when ||g||, ||f||, and || g^{-1}|| are within some range. The main technique of our algorithm is the reduction of a problem on a field to one in a...
Multilinear maps serve as a basis for a wide range of cryptographic applications. The first candidate construction of multilinear maps was proposed by Garg, Gentry, and Halevi in 2013, and soon afterwards, another construction was suggested by Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi (CLT13), which works over the integers. However, both of these were found to be insecure in the face of so-called zeroizing attacks, by Hu and Jia, and by Cheon, Han, Lee, Ryu and Stehlé. To improve on CLT13, Coron,...
The subfield attack exploits the presence of a subfield to solve overstretched versions of the NTRU assumption: norming the public key $h$ down to a subfield may lead to an easier lattice problem and any sufficiently good solution may be lifted to a short vector in the full NTRU-lattice. This approach was originally sketched in a paper of Gentry and Szydlo at Eurocrypt'02 and there also attributed to Jonsson, Nguyen and Stern. However, because it does not apply for small moduli and hence...
Known methods for obfuscating a circuit need to represent the circuit as a branching program and then use a multilinear map to encrypt the branching program. Multilinear maps are, however, too inefficient for encrypting the branching program. We found a dynamic encoding method which effectively singles out different inputs in the context of the matrix randomization technique of Kilian and Gentry et al., so that multilinear maps are no longer needed. To make the method work, we need the...
Recently, Coron presented an attack of GGH15 multilinear maps, which breaks the multipartite Diffie-Hellman key exchange protocol based on GGH15. In this paper, we describe a variation of GGH15, which seems to thwart known attacks.
Designing attribute-based systems supporting highly expressive access policies has been one of the principal focus of research in attribute-based cryptography. While attribute-based encryption (ABE) enables fine-grained access control over encrypted data in a multi-user environment, attribute-based signature (ABS) provides a powerful tool for preserving signer anonymity. Attributebased signcryption (ABSC), on the other hand, is a combination of ABE and ABS into a unified cost-effective...
In a constrained pseudorandom function (PRF), the master secret key can be used to derive constrained keys, where each constrained key k is constrained with respect to some Boolean circuit C. A constrained key k can be used to evaluate the PRF on all inputs x for which C(x) = 1. In almost all existing constrained PRF constructions, the constrained key k reveals its constraint C. In this paper we introduce the concept of private constrained PRFs, which are constrained PRFs with the...
In an order-preserving encryption scheme, the encryption algorithm produces ciphertexts that preserve the order of their plaintexts. Order-preserving encryption schemes have been studied intensely in the last decade, and yet not much is known about the security of these schemes. Very recently, Boneh et al. (Eurocrypt 2015) introduced a generalization of order-preserving encryption, called order-revealing encryption, and presented a construction which achieves this notion with best-possible...
We describe a cryptanalysis of the GGH15 multilinear maps. Our attack breaks in polynomial time the multipartite key-agreement protocol by generating an equivalent user private key. Our attack only applies to GGH15 without safeguards; for GGH15 with safeguards we only have a partial cryptanalysis that can recover any ratio of secret exponents. We also describe attacks against variants of the GGH13 multilinear maps proposed by Halevi (ePrint 2015/866) aiming at supporting graph-induced...
In this paper, we analyze the security of cryptosystems using short generators over ideal lattices such as candidate multilinear maps by Garg, Gentry and Halevi and fully homomorphic encryption by Smart and Vercauteren. Our approach is based on a recent work by Cramer, Ducas, Peikert and Regev on analysis of recovering a short generator of an ideal in the $q$-th cyclotomic field for a prime power $q$. In their analysis, implicit lower bounds of the special values of Dirichlet $L$-functions...
Cryptographic multilinear map is a useful tool for constructing numerous secure protocols and Graded Encoding System (GES) is an {\em approximate} concept of multilinear map. In multilinear map context, there are several important issues, mainly about security and efficiency. All early stage candidate multilinear maps are recently broken by so-called zeroizing attack, so that it is highly required to develop reliable mechanisms to prevent zeroizing attacks. Moreover, the encoding size in all...
After CLT13 of multilinear map over the integers was broken by Cheon, Han, Lee, Ryu and Stehle using zeroizing attack, a new variant CLT15 of CLT13 was proposed by Coron, Lepoint and Tibouchi by constructing new zero-testing parameter. Very recently, CLT15 was broken independently by Cheon, Lee and Ryu, and Minaud and Fouque using an extension of Cheon et al.’s attack. To immune CLT13 against zeroizing attack, we present a new construction of multilinear map over the integers using switching...
The advent of cloud computing has given rise to a plethora of work on verifiable delegation of computation. Homomorphic signatures are powerful tools that can be tailored for verifiable computation, as long as they are efficiently verifiable. The main advantages of homomorphic signatures for verifiable computation are twofold: \begin{inparaenum}[(i)] \item Any third party can verify the correctness of the delegated computation, \item and this third party is not required to have access to...
This article describes a polynomial attack on the new multilinear map over the integers presented by Coron, Lepoint and Tibouchi at CRYPTO 2015 (CLT15). This version is a fix of the first multilinear map over the integers presented by the same authors at CRYPTO 2013 (CLT13) and broken by Cheon et al. at EUROCRYPT 2015. The attack essentially downgrades CLT15 to its original version CLT13, and leads to a full break of the multilinear map for virtually all applications. In addition to the...
The purpose of this lecture note is to introduce lattice based cryptography, which is thought to be a cryptosystem of post-quantum age. We have tried to give as many details possible specially for novice on the subject. Something may be trivial to an expert but not to a novice. Many fundamental problems about lattice are thought to be hard even against quantum computer, compared to factorization problem which can be solved easily with quantum computer, via the celebrated Shor factorization...
Multilinear maps have many cryptographic applications. The first candidate construction of multilinear maps was proposed by Garg, Gentry, and Halevi (GGH13) in 2013, and soon afterwards, another candidate was suggested by Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi (CLT13) that works over the integers. However, both of these were found to be insecure in the face of a so-called zeroizing attack (HJ15, CHL+15). To improve on CLT13, Coron, Lepoint, and Tibouchi proposed another candidate of new multilinear...