[Resource Topic] 2021/163: CNF-FSS and its Applications

Welcome to the resource topic for 2021/163

Title:
CNF-FSS and its Applications

Authors: Paul Bunn, Eyal Kushilevitz, Rafail Ostrovsky

Abstract:

Function Secret Sharing (FSS), introduced by Boyle, Gilboa and Ishai [BGI15], extends the classical notion of secret-sharing a value to secret sharing a function. Namely, for a secret function f (from a class F), FSS provides a sharing of f whereby succinct shares (``keys’') are distributed to a set of parties, so that later the parties can non-interactively compute an additive sharing of f(x), for any input x in the domain of f. Previous work on FSS concentrated mostly on the two-party case, where highly efficient schemes are obtained for some simple, yet extremely useful, classes F (in particular, FSS for the class of point functions, a task referred to as DPF – Distributed Point Functions [GI14,BGI15]. In this paper, we concentrate on the multi-party case, with p >= 3 parties and t-security (1 <= t < p). First, we introduce the notion of CNF-DPF (or, more generally, CNF-FSS), where the scheme uses the CNF version of secret sharing (rather than additive sharing) to share each value f(x). We then demonstrate the utility of CNF-DPF by providing several applications. Our main result shows how CNF-DPF can be used to achieve substantial asymptotic improvement in communication complexity when using it as a building block for constructing standard (t,p)-DPF protocols that tolerate t > 1 (semi-honest) corruptions. For example, we build a 2-out-of-5 secure (standard) DPF scheme of communication complexity O(N^{1/4}), where N is the domain size of f (compared with the current best-known of O(N^{1/2}) for (2,5)-DPF). More generally, with p > dt parties, we give a (t,p)-DPF whose complexity grows as O(N^{1/2d}) (rather than O(\sqrt{N}) that follows from the (p-1,p)-DPF scheme of [BGI15]). We also present a 1-out-of-3 secure CNF-DPF scheme, in which each party holds two of the three keys, with poly-logarithmic communication complexity. These results have immediate implications to scenarios where (multi-server) DPF was shown to be applicable. For example, we show how to use such a scheme to obtain asymptotic improvement (O(\log^2N) versus O(\sqrt{N})) in communication complexity over the 3-party protocol of [BKKO20].

ePrint: https://eprint.iacr.org/2021/163

Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAigSFomTvc

Slides: https://iacr.org/submit/files/slides/2022/pkc/pkc2022/146/slides.pptx

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