CRJul 13, 2021

On SDVS Sender Privacy In The Multi-Party Setting

arXiv:2107.06119v1
AI Analysis

This work addresses sender-privacy for deniability in cryptographic protocols, but it appears incremental as it extends an existing concept without major breakthroughs.

The paper tackles the problem of extending sender-privacy in strong designated verifier signature schemes from a 2-party to an n-party setting, showing in which cases this extension provides stronger security and in which it does not.

Strong designated verifier signature schemes rely on sender-privacy to hide the identity of the creator of a signature to all but the intended recipient. This property can be invaluable in, for example, the context of deniability, where the identity of a party should not be deducible from the communication sent during a protocol execution. In this work, we explore the technical definition of sender-privacy and extend it from a 2-party setting to an n-party setting. Afterwards, we show in which cases this extension provides a stronger security and in which cases it does not.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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