Title :
Rate-Distortion Theory for Secrecy Systems
Author :
Schieler, Curt ; Cuff, Paul
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ, USA
Abstract :
Secrecy in communication systems is measured herein by the distortion that an adversary incurs. The transmitter and receiver share secret key, which they use to encrypt communication and ensure distortion at an adversary. A model is considered in which an adversary not only intercepts the communication from the transmitter to the receiver, but also potentially has side information. In particular, the adversary may have causal or noncausal access to a signal that is correlated with the source sequence or the receiver´s reconstruction sequence. The main contribution is the characterization of the optimal tradeoff among communication rate, secret key rate, distortion at the adversary, and distortion at the legitimate receiver. It is demonstrated that causal side information at the adversary plays a pivotal role in this tradeoff. It is also shown that measures of secrecy based on normalized equivocation are a special case of the framework.
Keywords :
private key cryptography; rate distortion theory; signal reconstruction; telecommunication security; adversary; causal side information; communication encryption; communication systems Secrecy; legitimate receiver; normalized equivocation; rate-distortion theory; receiver reconstruction sequence; secret key rate; signal correlation; source sequence; Ciphers; Distortion measurement; Rate-distortion; Receivers; Robustness; Transmitters; Rate-distortion theory; causal disclosure; equivocation; information-theoretic secrecy; shared secret key; soft covering lemma;
Journal_Title :
Information Theory, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TIT.2014.2365175