Multi-party computation of polynomials and branching programs without simultaneous interaction

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Abstract

Halevi, Lindell, and Pinkas (CRYPTO 2011) recently proposed a model for secure computation that captures communication patterns that arise in many practical settings, such as secure computation on the web. In their model, each party interacts only once, with a single centralized server. Parties do not interact with each other; in fact, the parties need not even be online simultaneously. In this work we present a suite of new, simple and efficient protocols for secure computation in this "one-pass" model. We give protocols that obtain optimal privacy for the following general tasks: - Evaluating any multivariate polynomial F(x1, ..., xn ) (modulo a large RSA modulus N), where the parties each hold an input x i. - Evaluating any read once branching program over the parties' inputs. As a special case, these function classes include all previous functions for which an optimally private, one-pass computation was known, as well as many new functions, including variance and other statistical functions, string matching, second-price auctions, classification algorithms and some classes of finite automata and decision trees. © 2013 International Association for Cryptologic Research.

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Gordon, S. D., Malkin, T., Rosulek, M., & Wee, H. (2013). Multi-party computation of polynomials and branching programs without simultaneous interaction. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 7881 LNCS, pp. 575–591). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38348-9_34

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