ITITApr 1

Secure Network Function Computation for General Target and Security Functions

arXiv:2604.0105146.9
Predicted impact top 20% in IT · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses secure data computation in networks against eavesdropping, providing foundational theoretical bounds and practical algorithms, though it is incremental by extending existing models to more general functions.

The paper tackles the problem of secure network function computation for arbitrary target and security functions, establishing a nontrivial upper bound on the secure computing capacity applicable to general networks and security levels, and deriving efficient algorithms and bounds for specific linear function cases.

Secure network function computation is a critical research direction in network coding, which aims to ensure that the target function is correctly computed at the sink node while preventing the wiretapper from obtaining any information about the security function. In this paper, we focus on the general secure network function computation model, where the target function f and the security function ζ are arbitrary, and the wiretapper can eavesdrop on any subset of edges with size at most a given security level. Using information-theoretic techniques, we establish a nontrivial upper bound on the secure computing capacity, which is applicable to arbitrary networks, arbitrary target and security functions, and arbitrary security levels. This upper bound is shown to degenerate to the existing bounds in the literature when the target and security functions are specific forms. Furthermore, we consider two specific models: one where the target function is vector-linear and the security function is the identity function, and another where both functions are vector-linear. For the former, we derive a simplified form of the upper bound on the secure computing capacity via order-theoretic methods and propose an efficient algorithm to compute this bound with linear time complexity in the number of network edges. For the latter, we characterize the equivalent conditions for the computability and security of linear secure network codes, develop two constructive schemes for such codes, and derive an upper bound on the minimal finite field size required for the constructions, thereby obtaining a nontrivial lower bound on the secure computing capacity.

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