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Cryptography with constant input locality. (English) Zbl 1215.94029

Menezes, Alfred (ed.), Advances in cryptology – CRYPTO 2007. 27th annual international cryptology conference, Santa Barbara, CA, USA, August 19–23, 2007. Proceedings. Berlin: Springer (ISBN 978-3-540-74142-8/pbk). Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4622, 92-110 (2007).
We study the following natural question: Which cryptographic primitives (if any) can be realized by functions with constant input locality, namely functions in which every bit of the input influences only a constant number of bits of the output? This continues the study of cryptography in low complexity classes. It was recently shown [B. Applebaum, Y. Ishai and E. Kushilevitz, “Cryptography in NC\(^0\)”, SIAM J. Comput. 36, No. 4, 845–888 (2006; Zbl 1126.94014)] that, under standard cryptographic assumptions, most cryptographic primitives can be realized by functions with constant output locality, namely ones in which every bit of the output is influenced by a constant number of bits from the input.
We (almost) characterize what cryptographic tasks can be performed with constant input locality. On the negative side, we show that primitives which require some form of non-malleability (such as digital signatures, message authentication, or non-malleable encryption) cannot be realized with constant input locality. On the positive side, assuming the intractability of certain problems from the domain of error correcting codes (namely, hardness of decoding a random linear code or the security of the McEliece cryptosystem), we obtain new constructions of one-way functions, pseudorandom generators, commitments, and semantically-secure public-key encryption schemes whose input locality is constant. Moreover, these constructions also enjoy constant output locality. Therefore, they give rise to cryptographic hardware that has constant-depth, constant fan-in and constant fan-out. As a byproduct, we obtain a pseudorandom generator whose output and input locality are both optimal (namely, 3).
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1123.94001].

MSC:

94A60 Cryptography

Citations:

Zbl 1126.94014
Full Text: DOI