Abstract
The notion of covert security for secure two-party computation serves as a compromise between the traditional semi-honest and malicious security definitions. Roughly, covert security ensures that cheating behavior is detected by the honest party with reasonable probability (say, 1/2). It provides more realistic guarantees than semi-honest security with significantly less overhead than is required by malicious security.
The rationale for covert security is that it dissuades cheating by parties that care about their reputation and do not want to risk being caught. But a much stronger disincentive is obtained if the honest party can generate a publicly verifiable certificate when cheating is detected. While the corresponding notion of publicly verifiable covert (PVC) security has been explored, existing PVC protocols are complex and less efficient than the best covert protocols, and have impractically large certificates.
We propose a novel PVC protocol that significantly improves on prior work. Our protocol uses only “off-the-shelf” primitives (in particular, it avoids signed oblivious transfer) and, for deterrence factor 1/2, has only 20–40% overhead compared to state-of-the-art semi-honest protocols. Our protocol also has, for the first time, constant-size certificates of cheating (e.g., 354 bytes long at the 128-bit security level).
As our protocol offers strong security guarantees with low overhead, we suggest that it is the best choice for many practical applications of secure two-party computation.
J. Katz—Work supported in part by a grant from Alibaba.
V. Kolesnikov—Work supported in part by Sandia National Laboratories, a multimission laboratory managed and operated by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC., a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International, Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energys National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-NA-0003525.
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Notes
- 1.
We observe that the certificate size in [13] can be improved to \(O(\kappa \cdot n)\) bits (where n is the parties’ input lengths) by carefully applying ideas from the literature. In many cases, this is still unacceptably large.
- 2.
For reasonable values of the parameters, the XOR-tree approach will be more efficient than a coding-theoretic approach [18].
- 3.
As an optimization, we have commit to seeds, just like , and then use those seeds to generate the (pseudo)randomness to use in each instance. (This optimization is critical for realizing constant-size certificates.).
- 4.
Note that defamation freeness implies that the protocol is also non-halting detection accurate [3].
- 5.
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Hong, C., Katz, J., Kolesnikov, V., Lu, Wj., Wang, X. (2019). Covert Security with Public Verifiability: Faster, Leaner, and Simpler. In: Ishai, Y., Rijmen, V. (eds) Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019. EUROCRYPT 2019. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 11478. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17659-4_4
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