Title :
A protocol to achieve independence in constant rounds
Author :
Gennaro, Rosario
Author_Institution :
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
fDate :
7/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Independence is a fundamental property needed to achieve security in fault-tolerant distributed computing. In practice, distributed communication networks are neither fully synchronous or fully asynchronous, but rather loosely synchronized. By this, we mean that in a communication protocol, messages at a given round may depend on messages from other players at the same round. These possible dependencies among messages create problems if we need n players to announce independently chosen values. This task is called simultaneous broadcast. In this paper, we present the first constant round protocol for simultaneous broadcast in a reasonable computation model (which includes a common shared random string among the players). The protocol is provably secure under general cryptographic assumptions. In the process, we develop a new and stronger formal definition for this problem. Previously known protocols for this task required either O(log n) or expected constant rounds to complete (depending on the computation model considered)
Keywords :
fault tolerant computing; security of data; transport protocols; communication protocol; constant round protocol; constant rounds; fault-tolerant distributed computing; independence; security; simultaneous broadcast; Broadcasting; Communication networks; Computational modeling; Computer networks; Cryptographic protocols; Cryptography; Distributed computing; Fault tolerance; Intelligent networks; Variable structure systems;
Journal_Title :
Parallel and Distributed Systems, IEEE Transactions on