DocumentCode
3643168
Title
The Complexity of Quantitative Information Flow Problems
Author
Pavol Cerný;Krishnendu Chatterjee;Thomas A. Henzinger
Author_Institution
IST Austria, Austria
fYear
2011
fDate
6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
205
Lastpage
217
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the computational complexity of quantitative information flow (QIF) problems. Information-theoretic quantitative relaxations of noninterference (based on Shannon entropy)have been introduced to enable more fine-grained reasoning about programs in situations where limited information flow is acceptable. The QIF bounding problem asks whether the information flow in a given program is bounded by a constant d. Our first result is that the QIF bounding problem is PSPACE-complete. The QIF memoryless synthesis problem asks whether it is possible to resolve nondeterministic choices in a given partial program in such a way that in the resulting deterministic program, the quantitative information flow is bounded by a given constant d. Our second result is that the QIF memoryless synthesis problem is also EXPTIME-complete. The QIF memoryless synthesis problem generalizes to QIF general synthesis problem which does not impose the memoryless requirement (that is, by allowing the synthesized program to have more variables then the original partial program). Our third result is that the QIF general synthesis problem is EXPTIME-hard.
Keywords
"Cost accounting","Input variables","Complexity theory","Pins","Entropy","Security","Probability distribution"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Security Foundations Symposium (CSF), 2011 IEEE 24th
ISSN
1940-1434
Print_ISBN
978-1-61284-644-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CSF.2011.21
Filename
5992164
Link To Document