ITITApr 29

Multi-Server Secure Aggregation with Arbitrary Collusion and Heterogeneous Security Constraints

arXiv:2604.2639189.5
AI Analysis

It provides a theoretical foundation for designing secure aggregation protocols with diverse privacy requirements, generalizing prior homogeneous-security results.

This paper characterizes the fundamental communication and key generation rates for multi-server secure aggregation with heterogeneous security constraints and arbitrary user collusion, establishing tight bounds in most regimes and a bounded gap in the remaining regime.

We study the fundamental limits of multi-server secure aggregation over a two-hop network where multiple servers, each connected to a disjoint subset of users, jointly compute the sum of all users' inputs. The goal is to ensure that no server can infer any information about prescribed subsets of inputs beyond the desired aggregate, even when colluding with an arbitrary subset of users. Existing works largely focus on homogeneous security requirements, where all inputs are protected against colluding sets up to a given size. Such formulations are insufficient to capture more general scenarios in which different subsets of inputs may require protection against different collusion patterns. In this paper, we consider a general model with heterogeneous security requirements and arbitrary user collusion. We characterize the communication rates for all parameter regimes, and determine the minimum key rate required for secure aggregation in most regimes. In particular, we establish tight information-theoretic lower bounds and matching achievable schemes in a broad class of regimes. For the remaining regime, we derive a general lower bound together with an achievable scheme that attains it within a bounded gap. Our results reveal how the interplay between network topology and heterogeneous security constraints fundamentally determines the communication and key generation requirements, and generalize existing results on secure aggregation.

Foundations

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

Your Notes