Anirudh Chandramouli

2papers

2 Papers

CRJan 28, 2022
Perfectly-Secure Synchronous MPC with Asynchronous Fallback Guarantees

Ananya Appan, Anirudh Chandramouli, Ashish Choudhury

Secure multi-party computation (MPC) is a fundamental problem in secure distributed computing. An MPC protocol allows a set of $n$ mutually distrusting parties to carry out any joint computation of their private inputs, without disclosing any additional information about their inputs. MPC with information-theoretic security provides the strongest security guarantees and remains secure even against computationally unbounded adversaries. Perfectly-secure MPC protocols is a class of information-theoretically secure MPC protocols, which provides all the security guarantees in an error-free fashion. The focus of this work is perfectly-secure MPC. Known protocols are designed assuming either a synchronous or asynchronous communication network. It is well known that perfectly-secure synchronous MPC protocol is possible as long as adversary can corrupt any $t_s < n/3$ parties. On the other hand, perfectly-secure asynchronous MPC protocol can tolerate up to $t_a < n/4$ corrupt parties. A natural question is does there exist a single MPC protocol for the setting where the parties are not aware of the exact network type and which can tolerate up to $t_s < n/3$ corruptions in a synchronous network and up to $t_a < n/4$ corruptions in an asynchronous network. We design such a best-of-both-worlds perfectly-secure MPC protocol, provided $3t_s + t_a < n$ holds. For designing our protocol, we design two important building blocks, which are of independent interest. The first building block is a best-of-both-worlds Byzantine agreement (BA) protocol tolerating $t < n/3$ corruptions and which remains secure, both in a synchronous as well as asynchronous network. The second building block is a polynomial-based best-of-both-worlds verifiable secret-sharing (VSS) protocol, which can tolerate up to $t_s$ and $t_a$ corruptions in a synchronous and in an asynchronous network respectively.

CRDec 21, 2021
A Survey on Perfectly-Secure Verifiable Secret-Sharing

Anirudh Chandramouli, Ashish Choudhury, Arpita Patra

Verifiable Secret-Sharing (VSS) is a fundamental primitive in secure distributed computing. It is used as a building block in several distributed computing tasks, such as Byzantine agreement and secure multi-party computation. In this article, we consider VSS schemes with perfect security, tolerating computationally unbounded adversaries. We comprehensively survey the existing perfectly-secure VSS schemes in three different communication settings, namely synchronous, asynchronous and hybrid setting and provide full details of the existing schemes in these settings. The aim of this survey is to provide a clear knowledge and foundation to researchers who are interested in knowing and extending the state-of-the-art perfectly-secure VSS schemes.