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CTRSA
2009
Springer

Communication-Efficient Private Protocols for Longest Common Subsequence

14 years 3 months ago
Communication-Efficient Private Protocols for Longest Common Subsequence
We design communication efficient two-party and multi-party protocols for the longest common subsequence (LCS) and related problems. Our protocols achieve privacy with respect to passive adversaries, under reasonable cryptographic assumptions. We benefit from the somewhat surprising interplay of an efficient block-retrieval PIR (GentryRamzan, ICALP 2005) with the classic "four Russians" algorithmic design. This result is the first improvement to the communication complexity for this application over generic results (such as Yao's garbled circuit protocol) and, as such, is interesting as a contribution to the theory of communication efficiency for secure two-party and multiparty applications.
Matthew K. Franklin, Mark Gondree, Payman Mohassel
Added 16 Aug 2010
Updated 16 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where CTRSA
Authors Matthew K. Franklin, Mark Gondree, Payman Mohassel
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