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233
PROACTIVE SECRET SHARING Or: How to Cope With Perpetual Leakage
, 1998
"... Secret sharing schemes protect secrets by distributing them over different locations (share holders). In particular, in k out of n threshold schemes, security is assured if throughout the entire life-time of the secret the adversary is restricted to compromise less than k of the n locations. For ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 164 (12 self)
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Secret sharing schemes protect secrets by distributing them over different locations (share holders). In particular, in k out of n threshold schemes, security is assured if throughout the entire life-time of the secret the adversary is restricted to compromise less than k of the n locations. For long-lived and sensitive secrets this protection may be insufficient. We propose an efficient proactive secret sharing scheme, where shares are periodically renewed (without changing the secret) in such a way that information gained by the adversary in one time period is useless for attacking the secret after the shares are renewed. Hence, the adversary willing to learn the secret needs to break to all k locations during the same time period (e.g., one day, a week, etc.). Furthermore, in order to guarantee the availability and integrity of the secret, we provide mechanisms to detect maliciously (or accidentally) corrupted shares, as well as mechanisms to secretly recover the correct...
Signature schemes and anonymous credentials from bilinear maps
, 2004
"... Abstract. We propose a new and efficient signature scheme that is provably secure in the plain model. The security of our scheme is based on a discrete-logarithm-based assumption put forth by Lysyanskaya, Rivest, Sahai, and Wolf (LRSW) who also showed that it holds for generic groups and is independ ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 143 (18 self)
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Abstract. We propose a new and efficient signature scheme that is provably secure in the plain model. The security of our scheme is based on a discrete-logarithm-based assumption put forth by Lysyanskaya, Rivest, Sahai, and Wolf (LRSW) who also showed that it holds for generic groups and is independent of the decisional Diffie-Hellman assumption. We prove security of our scheme under the LRSW assumption for groups with bilinear maps. We then show how our scheme can be used to construct efficient anonymous credential systems as well as group signature and identity escrow schemes. To this end, we provide efficient protocols that allow one to prove in zero-knowledge the knowledge of a signature on a committed (or encrypted) message and to obtain a signature on a committed message. 1
A fuzzy vault scheme
- In International Symposium on Information Theory (ISIT
, 2002
"... Abstract. We describe a simple and novel cryptographic construction that we refer to as a fuzzy vault. A player Alice may place a secret value κ in a fuzzy vault and “lock ” it using a set A of elements from some public universe U. If Bob tries to “unlock ” the vault using a set B of similar length, ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 131 (1 self)
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Abstract. We describe a simple and novel cryptographic construction that we refer to as a fuzzy vault. A player Alice may place a secret value κ in a fuzzy vault and “lock ” it using a set A of elements from some public universe U. If Bob tries to “unlock ” the vault using a set B of similar length, he obtains κ only if B is close to A, i.e., only if A and B overlap substantially. In constrast to previous constructions of this flavor, ours possesses the useful feature of order invariance, meaning that the ordering of A and B is immaterial to the functioning of the vault. As we show, our scheme enjoys provable security against a computationally unbounded attacker.
Efficient threshold signature, multisignature and blind signature schemes based on the Gap-Diffie-Hellman-Group signature scheme
- PROCEEDINGS OF PKC 2003, VOLUME 2567 OF LNCS
, 2003
"... We propose a robust proactive threshold signature scheme, a multisignature scheme and a blind signature scheme which work in any Gap Diffie-Hellman (GDH) group (where the Computational Diffie-Hellman problem is hard but the Decisional Diffie-Hellman problem is easy). Our constructions are based on t ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 130 (0 self)
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We propose a robust proactive threshold signature scheme, a multisignature scheme and a blind signature scheme which work in any Gap Diffie-Hellman (GDH) group (where the Computational Diffie-Hellman problem is hard but the Decisional Diffie-Hellman problem is easy). Our constructions are based on the recently proposed GDH signature scheme of Boneh et al. [8]. Due to the instrumental structure of GDH groups and of the base scheme, it turns out that most of our constructions are simpler, more efficient and have more useful properties than similar existing constructions. We support all the proposed schemes with proofs under the appropriate computational assumptions, using the corresponding notions of security.
An Efficient Off-line Electronic Cash System Based On The Representation Problem
, 1993
"... We present a new off-line electronic cash system based on a problem, called the representation problem, of which little use has been made in literature thus far. Our system is the first to be based entirely on discrete logarithms. Using the representation problem as a basic concept, some technique ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 125 (3 self)
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We present a new off-line electronic cash system based on a problem, called the representation problem, of which little use has been made in literature thus far. Our system is the first to be based entirely on discrete logarithms. Using the representation problem as a basic concept, some techniques are introduced that enable us to construct protocols for withdrawal and payment that do not use the cut and choose methodology of earlier systems. As a consequence, our cash system is much more efficient in both computation and communication complexity than previously proposed systems. Another
Secure Distributed Key Generation for Discrete-Log Based Cryptosystems
, 1999
"... Abstract. Distributed key generation is a main component of threshold cryptosystems and distributed cryptographic computing in general. Solutions to the distributed generation of private keys for discrete-log based cryptosystems have been known for several years and used in a variety of protocols an ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 107 (2 self)
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Abstract. Distributed key generation is a main component of threshold cryptosystems and distributed cryptographic computing in general. Solutions to the distributed generation of private keys for discrete-log based cryptosystems have been known for several years and used in a variety of protocols and in many research papers. However, these solutions fail to provide the full security required and claimed by these works. We show how an active attacker controlling a small number of parties can bias the values of the generated keys, thus violating basic correctness and secrecy requirements of a key generation protocol. In particular, our attacks point out to the places where the proofs of security fail. Based on these findings we designed a distributed key generation protocol which we present here together with a rigorous proof of security. Our solution, that achieves optimal resiliency, can be used as a drop-in replacement for key generation modules as well as other components of threshold or proactive discrete-log based cryptosystems.
Practical Verifiable Encryption and Decryption of Discrete Logarithms
, 2003
"... Abstract. This paper addresses the problem of designing practical protocols for proving properties about encrypted data. To this end, it presents a variant of the new public key encryption of Cramer and Shoup based on Paillier’s decision composite residuosity assumption, along with efficient protoco ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 105 (14 self)
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Abstract. This paper addresses the problem of designing practical protocols for proving properties about encrypted data. To this end, it presents a variant of the new public key encryption of Cramer and Shoup based on Paillier’s decision composite residuosity assumption, along with efficient protocols for verifiable encryption and decryption of discrete logarithms (and more generally, of representations with respect to multiple bases). This is the first verifiable encryption system that provides chosen ciphertext security and avoids inefficient cut-and-choose proofs. The presented protocols have numerous applications, including key escrow, optimistic fair exchange, publicly verifiable secret and signature sharing, universally composable commitments, group signatures, and confirmer signatures. 1
Proving in Zero-Knowledge that a Number is the Product of Two Safe Primes
, 1998
"... This paper presents the first efficient statistical zero-knowledge protocols to prove statements such as: A committed number is a pseudo-prime. ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 99 (11 self)
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This paper presents the first efficient statistical zero-knowledge protocols to prove statements such as: A committed number is a pseudo-prime.
Separability and Efficiency for Generic Group Signature Schemes (Extended Abstract)
, 1999
"... A cryptographic protocol possesses separability if the participants can choose their keys independently of each other. This is advantageous from a key-management as well as from a security point of view. This paper focuses on separability in group signature schemes. Such schemes allow a group member ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 70 (13 self)
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A cryptographic protocol possesses separability if the participants can choose their keys independently of each other. This is advantageous from a key-management as well as from a security point of view. This paper focuses on separability in group signature schemes. Such schemes allow a group member to sign messages anonymously on the group's behalf. However, in case of this anonymity's misuse, a trustee can reveal the originator of a signature. We provide a generic fully separable group signature scheme and present an ecient instantiation thereof. The scheme is suited for large groups; the size of the group's public key and the length of signatures do not depe...
Cryptographically Strong Undeniable Signatures, Unconditionally Secure for the Signer
, 1991
"... "Undeniable" (or perhaps rather "invisible") signatures are digital signatures which the recipient cannot show round without the help of the signer. If forced to either acknowledge or deny a signature, however, the signer cannot deny it if it is authentic. We present the first undeniable signature ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 62 (1 self)
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"Undeniable" (or perhaps rather "invisible") signatures are digital signatures which the recipient cannot show round without the help of the signer. If forced to either acknowledge or deny a signature, however, the signer cannot deny it if it is authentic. We present the first undeniable signature scheme which is unconditionally secure for the signer (except for an exponentially small error probability). The security for the recipient is provably as secure as the discrete logarithm in certain groups. Besides, this is the first practical cryptographically strong undeniable signature scheme at all. In many cases, it is more efficient than previous signature schemes unconditionally secure for the signer. Interesting subprotocols are efficient cryptographically collision-free hash functions based on the discrete log, and efficient perfectly hiding commitments on numbers modulo a prime with particular inequality proofs.

