CRGRJan 10, 2014

General Impossibility of Group Homomorphic Encryption in the Quantum World

arXiv:1401.2417v221 citations
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This is a foundational result for cryptography, showing a general impossibility that affects widely-used encryption primitives in the quantum era.

The paper proves that abelian group homomorphic encryption is impossible under quantum adversaries assuming IND-CPA security, addressing the challenge of quantum-resistant cryptography.

Group homomorphic encryption represents one of the most important building blocks in modern cryptography. It forms the basis of widely-used, more sophisticated primitives, such as CCA2-secure encryption or secure multiparty computation. Unfortunately, recent advances in quantum computation show that many of the existing schemes completely break down once quantum computers reach maturity (mainly due to Shor's algorithm). This leads to the challenge of constructing quantum-resistant group homomorphic cryptosystems. In this work, we prove the general impossibility of (abelian) group homomorphic encryption in the presence of quantum adversaries, when assuming the IND-CPA security notion as the minimal security requirement. To this end, we prove a new result on the probability of sampling generating sets of finite (sub-)groups if sampling is done with respect to an arbitrary, unknown distribution. Finally, we provide a sufficient condition on homomorphic encryption schemes for our quantum attack to work and discuss its satisfiability in non-group homomorphic cases. The impact of our results on recent fully homomorphic encryption schemes poses itself as an open question.

Foundations

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