DocumentCode
2226080
Title
Intrusion-Resilient Secret Sharing
Author
Dziembowski, Stefan ; Pietrzak, Krzysztof
Author_Institution
Univ. of Rome La Sapienza, Rome
fYear
2007
fDate
21-23 Oct. 2007
Firstpage
227
Lastpage
237
Abstract
We introduce a new primitive called intrusion-resilient secret sharing (IRSS), whose security proof exploits the fact that there exist functions which can be efficiently computed interactively using low communication complexity in k, but not in k-1 rounds. IRSS is a means of sharing a secret message amongst a set of players which comes with a very strong security guarantee. The shares in an IRSS are made artificially large so that it is hard to retrieve them completely, and the reconstruction procedure is interactive requiring the players to exchange k short messages. The adversaries considered can attack the scheme in rounds, where in each round the adversary chooses some player to corrupt and some function, and retrieves the output of that function applied to the share of the corrupted player. This model captures for example computers connected to a network which can occasionally he infected by malicious software like viruses, which can compute any function on the infected machine, but cannot sent out a huge amount of data. Using methods from the bounded-retrieval model, we construct an IRSS scheme which is secure against any computationally unbounded adversary as long as the total amount of information retrieved by the adversary is somewhat less than the length of the shares, and the adversary makes at most k-1 corruption rounds (as described above, where k rounds are necessary for reconstruction). We extend our basic scheme in several ways in order to allow the shares sent by the dealer to be short (the players then blow them up locally) and to handle even stronger adversaries who can learn some of the shares completely. As mentioned, there is an obvious connection between IRSS schemes and the fact that there exist functions with an exponential gap in their communication complexity for k and k-1 rounds. Our scheme implies such a separation which is in several aspects stronger than the previously known ones.
Keywords
computational complexity; game theory; information retrieval; interactive systems; invasive software; security of data; bounded-retrieval model; communication complexity; intrusion-resilient secret sharing; malicious software; reconstruction procedure; Art; Complexity theory; Computer networks; Computer science; Computer security; Computer viruses; Cryptographic protocols; Cryptography; Information retrieval; Information security;
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.2007.63
Filename
4389495
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