Title :
Breaking the O(n1(2k-1)/) barrier for information-theoretic Private Information Retrieval
Author :
Beimel, Amos ; Ishai, Yuval ; Kushilevitz, Eyal ; Raymond, Jean-François
Author_Institution :
CS Dept., Ben-Gurion Univ., Beer Sheva, Israel
Abstract :
Private information retrieval (PIR) protocols allow a user to retrieve a data item from a database while hiding the identity of the item being retrieved. Specifically, in information-theoretic, k-server PIR protocols the database is replicated among k servers, and each server learns nothing about the item the user retrieves. The cost of such protocols is measured by the communication complexity of retrieving one out of n bits of data. For any fixed k, the complexity of the best protocols prior to our work was O(n12k-1/). Since then several methods were developed in an attempt to beat this bound, but all these methods yielded the same asymptotic bound. In this paper, this barrier is finally broken and the complexity of information-theoretic k-server PIR is improved to nO(log log kk log k)/. The new PIR protocols can also be used to construct k-query binary locally decodable codes of length exp(nO(log log kk log k)/), compared to exp(n1k-1/) in previous constructions. The improvements presented in this paper apply even for small values of k: the PIR protocols are more efficient than previous ones for every k≥3, and the locally decodable codes are shorter for every k≥4.
Keywords :
communication complexity; information retrieval; polynomials; protocols; communication complexity; data item; database; information-theoretic private information retrieval; k-server PIR protocols; protocols; Access protocols; Complexity theory; Databases; Decoding; Information retrieval; Scholarships; Upper bound;
Conference_Titel :
Foundations of Computer Science, 2002. Proceedings. The 43rd Annual IEEE Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1822-2
DOI :
10.1109/SFCS.2002.1181949