Title :
On the complexity of bounded-interaction and noninteractive zero-knowledge proofs
Author_Institution :
NEC Res. Inst., Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract :
We consider the basic cryptographic primitive known as zero-knowledge proofs on committed bits. In this primitive, a prover P commits to a set of bits, and then at a later time convinces a verifier V that some property 𝒫 holds for a subset of these bits. It is known how to implement this primitive based on an ordinary bit-committal primitive, but the standard implementations involve a great deal of interaction between the prover and the verifier. We introduce new implementations that require markedly less interaction. We implement bounded-interaction proofs on committed bits, generalizing a model of A. De Micali et al. (1988). For all security parameters, our implementations require only a lg2 (n) overhead over the best known circuit-based interactive implementations; for sufficiently large security parameters this gap drops to a lg(n) factor
Keywords :
computational complexity; cryptography; protocols; bounded-interaction; bounded-interaction proofs; committed bits; complexity; cryptographic primitive; noninteractive zero-knowledge proofs; Circuits; Cryptographic protocols; Cryptography; Error probability; Security; Time measurement;
Conference_Titel :
Foundations of Computer Science, 1994 Proceedings., 35th Annual Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Santa Fe, NM
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-6580-7
DOI :
10.1109/SFCS.1994.365744