×

Unified, minimal and selectively randomizable structure-preserving signatures. (English) Zbl 1326.94067

Lindell, Yehuda (ed.), Theory of cryptography. 11th theory of cryptography conference, TCC 2014, San Diego, CA, USA, February 24–26, 2014. Proceedings. Berlin: Springer (ISBN 978-3-642-54241-1/pbk). Lecture Notes in Computer Science 8349, 688-712 (2014).
Summary: We construct a structure-preserving signature scheme that is selectively randomizable and works in all types of bilinear groups. We give matching lower bounds showing that our structure-preserving signature scheme is optimal with respect to both signature size and public verification key size.
State of the art structure-preserving signatures in the asymmetric setting consist of 3 group elements, which is known to be optimal. Our construction preserves the signature size of 3 group elements and also at the same time minimizes the verification key size to 1 group element.
Depending on the application, it is sometimes desirable to have strong unforgeability and in other situations desirable to have randomizable signatures. To get the best of both worlds, we introduce the notion of selective randomizability where the signer may for specific signatures provide randomization tokens that enable randomization.
Our structure-preserving signature scheme unifies the different pairing-based settings since it can be instantiated in both symmetric and asymmetric groups. Since previously optimal structure-preserving signatures had only been constructed in asymmetric bilinear groups this closes an important gap in our knowledge. Having a unified signature scheme that works in all types of bilinear groups is not just conceptually nice but also gives a hedge against future cryptanalytic attacks. An instantiation of our signature scheme in an asymmetric bilinear group may remain secure even if cryptanalysts later discover an efficiently computable homomorphism between the source groups.
For the entire collection see [Zbl 1280.94007].

MSC:

94A60 Cryptography
Full Text: DOI