Title
David and Goliath commitments: UC computation for asymmetric parties using tamper-proof hardware
Abstract
Designing secure protocols in the Universal Composability (UC) framework confers many advantages. In particular, it allows the protocols to be securely used as building blocks in more complex protocols, and assists in understanding their security properties. Unfortunately, most existing models in which universally composable computation is possible (for useful functionalities) require a trusted setup stage. Recently, Katz [Eurocrypt '07] proposed an alternative to the trusted setup assumption: tamper-proof hardware. Instead of trusting a third party to correctly generate the setup information, each party can create its own hardware tokens, which it sends to the other parties. Each party is only required to trust that its own tokens are tamper-proof. Katz designed a UC commitment protocol that requires both parties to generate hardware tokens. In addition, his protocol relies on a specific number-theoretic assumption. In this paper, we construct UC commitment protocols for "David" and "Goliath": we only require a single party (Goliath) to be capable of generating tokens. We construct a version of the protocol that is secure for computationally unbounded parties, and a more efficient version that makes computational assumptions only about David (we require only the existence of a one-way function). Our protocols are simple enough to be performed by hand on David's side. These properties may allow such protocols to be used in situations which are inherently asymmetric in real-life, especially those involving individuals versus large organizations. Classic examples include voting protocols (voters versus "the government") and protocols involving private medical data (patients versus insurance-agencies or hospitals).
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1007/978-3-540-78967-3_30
IACR Cryptology ePrint Archive
Keywords
DocType
Volume
uc computation,asymmetric party,uc commitment protocol,own hardware token,secure protocol,complex protocol,computationally unbounded party,setup assumption,hardware token,setup information,setup stage,tamper-proof hardware,single party,goliath commitment,security protocol,one way function
Conference
2008
ISSN
ISBN
Citations 
0302-9743
3-540-78966-9
45
PageRank 
References 
Authors
1.30
26
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Tal Moran143925.36
Gil Segev2133551.71