(2019) Efficient UC Commitment Extension with Homomorphism for Free (and Applications).
Abstract
Homomorphic universally composable (UC) commitments allow for the sender to reveal the result of additions and multiplications of values contained in commitments without revealing the values themselves while assuring the receiver of the correctness of such computation on committed values. In this work, we construct essentially optimal additively homomorphic UC commitments from any (not necessarily UC or homomorphic) extractable commitment. We obtain amortized linear computational complexity in the length of the input messages and rate 1. Next, we show how to extend our scheme to also obtain multiplicative homomorphism at the cost of asymptotic optimality but retaining low concrete complexity for practical parameters. While the previously best constructions use UC oblivious transfer as the main building block, our constructions only require extractable commitments and PRGs, achieving better concrete efficiency and offering new insights into the sufficient conditions for obtaining homomorphic UC commitments. Moreover, our techniques yield public coin protocols, which are compatible with the Fiat-Shamir heuristic. These results come at the cost of realizing a restricted version of the homomorphic commitment functionality where the sender is allowed to perform any number of commitments and operations on committed messages but is only allowed to perform a single batch opening of a number of commitments. Although this functionality seems restrictive, we show that it can be used as a building block for more efficient instantiations of recent protocols for secure multiparty computation and zero knowledge non-interactive arguments of knowledge.
Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (A Paper) (Paper) |
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Conference: | ASIACRYPT International Conference on the Theory and Application of Cryptology and Information Security |
Depositing User: | Nico Döttling |
Date Deposited: | 05 Sep 2019 12:50 |
Last Modified: | 05 Sep 2019 12:51 |
Primary Research Area: | NRA1: Trustworthy Information Processing |
URI: | https://publications.cispa.saarland/id/eprint/2967 |
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