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Succinct non-interactive arguments via linear interactive proofs. (English) Zbl 1316.68056

Sahai, Amit (ed.), Theory of cryptography. 10th theory of cryptography conference, TCC 2013, Tokyo, Japan, March 3–6, 2013. Proceedings. Berlin: Springer (ISBN 978-3-642-36593-5/pbk). Lecture Notes in Computer Science 7785, 315-333 (2013).
Summary: Succinct non-interactive arguments (SNARGs) enable verifying NP statements with lower complexity than required for classical NP verification. Traditionally, the focus has been on minimizing the length of such arguments; nowadays researches have focused also on minimizing verification time, by drawing motivation from the problem of delegating computation.
A common relaxation is a preprocessing SNARG, which allows the verifier to conduct an expensive offline phase that is independent of the statement to be proven later. Recent constructions of preprocessing SNARGs have achieved attractive features: they are publicly-verifiable, proofs consist of only \(O(1)\) encrypted (or encoded) field elements, and verification is via arithmetic circuits of size linear in the NP statement. Additionally, these constructions seem to have “escaped the hegemony” of probabilistically-checkable proofs (PCPs) as a basic building block of succinct arguments.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1258.94005].

MSC:

68Q25 Analysis of algorithms and problem complexity
68Q15 Complexity classes (hierarchies, relations among complexity classes, etc.)
94A60 Cryptography
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