CRITMay 27, 2019

On the Commitment Capacity of Unfair Noisy Channels

arXiv:1905.10921v114 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the optimal rate for using unfair noisy channels in cryptographic commitments, which is an incremental advancement in cryptographic theory.

The paper tackled the problem of determining the commitment capacity of unfair noisy channels, where adversaries can control channel characteristics, and computed a single-letter characterization for this capacity, which reduces to the known capacity for fair channels.

Noisy channels are a valuable resource from a cryptographic point of view. They can be used for exchanging secret-keys as well as realizing other cryptographic primitives such as commitment and oblivious transfer. To be really useful, noisy channels have to be consider in the scenario where a cheating party has some degree of control over the channel characteristics. Damgård et al. (EUROCRYPT 1999) proposed a more realistic model where such level of control is permitted to an adversary, the so called unfair noisy channels, and proved that they can be used to obtain commitment and oblivious transfer protocols. Given that noisy channels are a precious resource for cryptographic purposes, one important question is determining the optimal rate in which they can be used. The commitment capacity has already been determined for the cases of discrete memoryless channels and Gaussian channels. In this work we address the problem of determining the commitment capacity of unfair noisy channels. We compute a single-letter characterization of the commitment capacity of unfair noisy channels. In the case where an adversary has no control over the channel (the fair case) our capacity reduces to the well-known capacity of a discrete memoryless binary symmetric channel.

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