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EUROCRYPT
2007
Springer

Round-Efficient Secure Computation in Point-to-Point Networks

14 years 3 months ago
Round-Efficient Secure Computation in Point-to-Point Networks
Essentially all work studying the round complexity of secure computation assumes broadcast as an atomic primitive. Protocols constructed under this assumption tend to have very poor round complexity when compiled for a point-to-point network due to the high overhead of emulating each invocation of broadcast. This problem is compounded when broadcast is used in more than one round of the original protocol due to the complexity of handling sequential composition (when using round-efficient emulation of broadcast). We argue that if the goal is to optimize round complexity in point-topoint networks, then it is preferable to design protocols -- assuming a broadcast channel -- minimizing the number of rounds in which broadcast is used rather than minimizing the total number of rounds. With this in mind, we present protocols for secure computation in a number of settings that use only a single round of broadcast. In all cases, we achieve optimal security threshold for adaptive adversaries, an...
Jonathan Katz, Chiu-Yuen Koo
Added 16 Aug 2010
Updated 16 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where EUROCRYPT
Authors Jonathan Katz, Chiu-Yuen Koo
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