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Building secure tame-like multivariate public-key cryptosystems: the new TTS. (English) Zbl 1127.94356

Boyd, Colin (ed.) et al., Information security and privacy. 10th Australasian conference, ACISP 2005, Brisbane, Australia, July 4–6, 2005. Proceedings. Berlin: Springer (ISBN 3-540-26547-3/pbk). Lecture Notes in Computer Science 3574, 518-531 (2005).
Summary: Multivariate public-key cryptosystems (sometimes polynomial-based PKC’s or just multivariates) handle polynomials of many variables over relatively small fields instead of elements of a large ring or group. The “tame-like” or “sparse” class of multivariates are distinguished by the relatively few terms that they have per central equation. We explain how they differ from the “big-field” type of multivariates, represented by derivatives of \(C\) and HFE, how they are better, and give basic security criteria for them. The last is shown to be satisfied by efficient schemes called “Enhanced TTS” which is built on a combination of the Oil-and-Vinegar and Triangular ideas. Their security levels are estimated. In this process we summarize and in some cases, improve rank-based attacks, which seek linear combinations of certain matrices at given ranks. These attacks are responsible for breaking many prior multivariate designs.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1076.94001].

MSC:

94A60 Cryptography
94A62 Authentication, digital signatures and secret sharing

Software:

FLASH; FGb
Full Text: DOI