Title :
Perfectly secure encryption of individual sequences
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Technion - Israel Inst. of Technol., Haifa, Israel
Abstract :
In analogy to the well-known notion of finite-state compressibility of individual sequences, due to Lempel and Ziv, we define a similar notion of “finite-state encryptability” of an individual plaintext sequence, as the minimum asymptotic key rate that must be consumed by finite-state encrypters so as to guarantee perfect secrecy in a well-defined sense. Our main basic result is that the finite-state encryptability is equal to the finite-state compressibility for every individual sequence. This is in parallelism to Shannon´s classical probabilistic counterpart result, asserting that the minimum required key rate is equal to the entropy rate of the source. However, the redundancy, defined as the gap between the upper bound (direct part) and the lower bound (converse part) in the encryption problem, turns out to decay at a different rate (in fact, much slower) than the analogous redundancy associated with the compression problem. We also extend our main theorem, allowing: (i) availability of side information (SI) at the encrypter/decrypter/eavesdropper, (ii) lossy reconstruction at the decrypter.
Keywords :
cryptography; entropy; finite state machines; text analysis; SI; converse part; decrypter; different rate; direct part; eavesdropper; encryption security; finite-state compressibility; finite-state encryptability; finite-state encrypters; individual plaintext sequence; lossy reconstruction; lower bound; minimum asymptotic key rate; redundancy; side information availability; source entropy rate; upper bound; Complexity theory; Encryption; Redundancy; Silicon; Upper bound;
Conference_Titel :
Information Theory Proceedings (ISIT), 2012 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Cambridge, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2580-6
Electronic_ISBN :
2157-8095
DOI :
10.1109/ISIT.2012.6283541