Sciweavers

EUROCRYPT
2009
Springer

Resettably Secure Computation

14 years 5 months ago
Resettably Secure Computation
Abstract. The notion of resettable zero-knowledge (rZK) was introduced by Canetti, Goldreich, Goldwasser and Micali (FOCS'01) as a strengthening of the classical notion of zero-knowledge. A rZK protocol remains zero-knowledge even if the verifier can reset the prover back to its initial state anytime during the protocol execution and force it to use the same random tape again and again. Following this work, various extensions of this notion were considered for the zero-knowledge and witness indistinguishability functionalities. In this paper, we initiate the study of resettability for more general functionalities. We first consider the setting of resettable two-party computation where a party (called the user) can reset the other party (called the smartcard) anytime during the protocol execution. After being reset, the smartcard comes back to its original state and thus the user has the opportunity to start interacting with it again (knowing that the smartcard will use the same se...
Vipul Goyal, Amit Sahai
Added 24 Nov 2009
Updated 24 Nov 2009
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where EUROCRYPT
Authors Vipul Goyal, Amit Sahai
Comments (0)