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Communication Complexity and Secure Function Evaluation

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TLDR
In this paper, two new methodologies for the design of efficient secure protocols, that differ with respect to their underlying computational models, are proposed, which are more efficient than previously known ones in either communication or computation.
Abstract
We suggest two new methodologies for the design of efficient secure protocols, that differ with respect to their underlying computational models. In one methodology we utilize the communication complexity tree (or branching for f and transform it into a secure protocol. In other words, "any function f that can be computed using communication complexity c can be can be computed securely using communication complexity that is polynomial in c and a security parameter". The second methodology uses the circuit computing f, enhanced with look-up tables as its underlying computational model. It is possible to simulate any RAM machine in this model with polylogarithmic blowup. Hence it is possible to start with a computation of f on a RAM machine and transform it into a secure protocol. We show many applications of these new methodologies resulting in protocols efficient either in communication or in computation. In particular, we exemplify a protocol for the "millionaires problem", where two participants want to compare their values but reveal no other information. Our protocol is more efficient than previously known ones in either communication or computation.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

How to play ANY mental game

TL;DR: This work presents a polynomial-time algorithm that, given as a input the description of a game with incomplete information and any number of players, produces a protocol for playing the game that leaks no partial information, provided the majority of the players is honest.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Protocols for secure computations

TL;DR: This paper describes three ways of solving the millionaires’ problem by use of one-way functions (i.e., functions which are easy to evaluate but hard to invert) and discusses the complexity question “How many bits need to be exchanged for the computation”.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

How to generate and exchange secrets

TL;DR: A new tool for controlling the knowledge transfer process in cryptographic protocol design is introduced and it is applied to solve a general class of problems which include most of the two-party cryptographic problems in the literature.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Completeness theorems for non-cryptographic fault-tolerant distributed computation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that every function of n inputs can be efficiently computed by a complete network of n processors in such a way that if no faults occur, no set of size t can be found.
Book

Communication Complexity

TL;DR: This chapter surveys the theory of two-party communication complexity and presents results regarding the following models of computation: • Finite automata • Turing machines • Decision trees • Ordered binary decision diagrams • VLSI chips • Networks of threshold gates.
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