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The two faces of lattices in cryptology. (English) Zbl 1006.94531

Silverman, Joseph H. (ed.), Cryptography and lattices. 1st international conference, CaLC 2001, Providence, RI, USA, March 29-30, 2001. Revised papers. Berlin: Springer. Lect. Notes Comput. Sci. 2146, 146-180 (2001).
Summary: Lattices are regular arrangements of points in \(n\)-dimensional space, whose study appeared in the 19th century in both number theory and crystallography. Since the appearance of the celebrated Lenstra-Lenstra-Lovász lattice basis reduction algorithm twenty years ago, lattices have had surprising applications in cryptology. Until recently, the applications of lattices to cryptology were only negative, as lattices were used to break various cryptographic schemes. Paradoxically, several positive cryptographic applications of lattices have emerged in the past five years: there now exist public-key cryptosystems based on the hardness of lattice problems, and lattices play a crucial role in a few security proofs. We survey the main examples of the two faces of lattices in cryptology.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 0971.00060].

MSC:

94A60 Cryptography
11H06 Lattices and convex bodies (number-theoretic aspects)