Zero-knowledge arguments for lattice-based PRFs and applications to E-cash

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Abstract

Beyond their security guarantees under well-studied assumptions, algebraic pseudo-random functions are motivated by their compatibility with efficient zero-knowledge proof systems, which is useful in a number of privacy applications like digital cash. We consider the problem of proving the correct evaluation of lattice-based PRFs based on the Learning-With-Rounding (LWR) problem introduced by Banerjee et al. (Eurocrypt’12). Namely, we are interested zero-knowledge arguments of knowledge of triples (y, k, x) such that y = Fk(x) is the correct evaluation of a PRF for a secret input x and a committed key k. While analogous statements admit efficient zero-knowledge protocols in the discrete logarithm setting, they have never been addressed in lattices so far. We provide such arguments for the key homomorphic PRF of Boneh et al. (Crypto’13) and the generic PRF implied by the LWR-based pseudorandom generator. As an application of our ZK arguments, we design the first compact e-cash system based on lattice assumptions. By ‘compact’, we mean that the complexity is at most logarithmic in the value of withdrawn wallets. Our system can be seen as a lattice-based analogue of the first compact e-cash construction due to Camenisch, Hohenberger and Lysyanskaya (Eurocrypt’05).

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Libert, B., Ling, S., Nguyen, K., & Wang, H. (2017). Zero-knowledge arguments for lattice-based PRFs and applications to E-cash. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10626 LNCS, pp. 304–335). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-70700-6_11

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