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CRYPTO
2008
Springer

Communication Complexity in Algebraic Two-Party Protocols

13 years 6 months ago
Communication Complexity in Algebraic Two-Party Protocols
In cryptography, there has been tremendous success in building various two-party protocols with small communication complexity out of homomorphic semantically-secure encryption schemes, using their homomorphic properties in a black-box way. A few notable examples of such primitives include items like single database Private Information Retrieval (PIR) schemes (introduced in [15]) and private database update with small communication (introduced in [5]). In this paper, we illustrate a general methodology for determining what types of protocols can and cannot be implemented with small communication by using homomorphic encryption in a black-box way. We hope that this work will provide a simple "litmus test" of feasibility for black-box use of known homomorphic encryption schemes by other cryptographic researchers attempting to develop new protocols with low communication. Additionally, a precise mathematical language for reasoning about such problems is developed in this work, ...
Rafail Ostrovsky, William E. Skeith III
Added 19 Oct 2010
Updated 19 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2008
Where CRYPTO
Authors Rafail Ostrovsky, William E. Skeith III
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