• DocumentCode
    2226993
  • Title

    Lower Bounds on Signatures From Symmetric Primitives

  • Author

    Barak, Boaz ; Mahmoody-Ghidary, Mohammad

  • Author_Institution
    Princeton Univ., Princeton
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    21-23 Oct. 2007
  • Firstpage
    680
  • Lastpage
    688
  • Abstract
    We show that every black-box construction of one-time signature schemes from a random oracle achieves security at most poly(q)2q. where q is the total number of queries to the oracle by the generation, signing, and verification algorithms. That is, any such scheme can be broken with probability close to 1 by a (computationally unbounded) adversary making poly(q)2q queries to the oracle. This is tight up to a constant factor in the number of queries, since a simple modification of Lamport´s scheme achieves 2(0.812-o(1))q security using q queries. Our results extend (with a loss of a constant factor in the number of queries) also to the random permutation and ideal-cipher oracles, and so can be taken as evidence of an inherent efficiency gap between signature schemes and symmetric primitives such as block ciphers, hash functions, and message authentication codes.
  • Keywords
    codes; computational complexity; cryptography; digital signatures; probability; query processing; Lamport scheme; black-box construction; block ciphers; hash functions; ideal-cipher oracles; lower bounds; message authentication codes; one-time signature schemes; oracle queries; probability; random oracle; random permutation; symmetric primitives; Computer science; Computer security; Cost function; Digital signatures; Lattices; Message authentication; Public key; Public key cryptography; Random number generation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Foundations of Computer Science, 2007. FOCS '07. 48th Annual IEEE Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Providence, RI
  • ISSN
    0272-5428
  • Print_ISBN
    978-0-7695-3010-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/FOCS.2007.71
  • Filename
    4389536