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CRYPTO
2011
Springer

Better Security for Deterministic Public-Key Encryption: The Auxiliary-Input Setting

12 years 11 months ago
Better Security for Deterministic Public-Key Encryption: The Auxiliary-Input Setting
Deterministic public-key encryption, introduced by Bellare, Boldyreva, and O’Neill (CRYPTO ’07), provides an alternative to randomized public-key encryption in various scenarios where the latter exhibits inherent drawbacks. A deterministic encryption algorithm, however, cannot satisfy any meaningful notion of security when the plaintext is distributed over a small set. Bellare et al. addressed this difficulty by requiring semantic security to hold only when the plaintext has high min-entropy from the adversary’s point of view. In many applications, however, an adversary may obtain auxiliary information that is related to the plaintext. Specifically, when deterministic encryption is used as a building block of a larger system, it is rather likely that plaintexts do not have high min-entropy from the adversary’s point of view. In such cases, the framework of Bellare et al. might fall short from providing robust security guarantees. We formalize a framework for studying the secu...
Zvika Brakerski, Gil Segev
Added 18 Dec 2011
Updated 18 Dec 2011
Type Journal
Year 2011
Where CRYPTO
Authors Zvika Brakerski, Gil Segev
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