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EUROCRYPT
2010
Springer

Public-Key Encryption in the Bounded-Retrieval Model

13 years 9 months ago
Public-Key Encryption in the Bounded-Retrieval Model
We construct the first public-key encryption scheme in the Bounded-Retrieval Model (BRM), providing security against various forms of adversarial “key leakage” attacks. In this model, the adversary is allowed to learn arbitrary information about the decryption key, subject only to the constraint that the overall amount of “leakage” is bounded by at most bits. The goal of the BRM is to design cryptographic schemes that can flexibly tolerate arbitrarily leakage bounds (few bits or many Gigabytes), by only increasing the size of secret key proportionally, but keeping all the other parameters — including the size of the public key, ciphertext, encryption/decryption time, and the number of secret-key bits accessed during decryption — small and independent of . As our main technical tool, we introduce the concept of an Identity-Based Hash Proof System (IB-HPS), which generalizes the notion of hash proof systems of Cramer and Shoup [CS02] to the identity-based setting. We give ...
Joël Alwen, Yevgeniy Dodis, Moni Naor, Gil Se
Added 19 Jul 2010
Updated 19 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where EUROCRYPT
Authors Joël Alwen, Yevgeniy Dodis, Moni Naor, Gil Segev, Shabsi Walfish, Daniel Wichs
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