DocumentCode
1710883
Title
Adaptive Hardness and Composable Security in the Plain Model from Standard Assumptions
Author
Canetti, Ran ; Lin, Huijia ; Pass, Rafael
fYear
2010
Firstpage
541
Lastpage
550
Abstract
We construct the first general secure computation protocols that require no trusted infrastructure other than authenticated communication, and that satisfy a meaningful notion of security that is preserved under universal composition- assuming only the existence of enhanced trapdoor permutations. The notion of security fits within a generalization of the "angelbased" framework of Prabhakaran and Sahai (STOC\´04) and implies super-polynomial time simulation security. Security notions of this kind are currently known to be realizable only under strong and specific hardness assumptions. A key element in our construction is a commitment scheme that satisfies a new and strong notion of security. The notion, security against chosen-commitment-attacks (CCA security), means that security holds even if the attacker has access to a extraction oracle that gives the adversary decommitment information to commitments of the adversary\´s choice. This notion is stronger than concurrent non-malleability and is of independent interest. We construct CCA-secure commitments based on standard one-way functions, and with no trusted set-up. To the best of our knowledge, this provides the first construction of a natural cryptographic primitive requiring adaptive hardness from standard hardness assumptions, using no trusted set-up or public keys.
Keywords
authorisation; cryptographic protocols; adaptive hardness; authenticated communication; chosen commitment attack; composable security; computation protocols; extraction oracle; public keys cryptography; security notion; standard assumption; super polynomial time simulation security; trapdoor permutation; Computational modeling; Context; Data mining; Protocols; Receivers; Robustness; Security; adaptive hardness; composable security; cryptography; secure multi-party computation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS), 2010 51st Annual IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
Las Vegas, NV
ISSN
0272-5428
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-8525-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FOCS.2010.86
Filename
5671303
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