META-BTS: Bootstrapping Precision Beyond the Limit

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Abstract

Bootstrapping, which enables the full homomorphic encryption scheme that can perform an infinite number of operations by restoring the modulus of the ciphertext with a small modulus, is an essential step in homomorphic encryption. However, bootstrapping is the most time and memory consuming of all homomorphic operations. As we increase the precision of bootstrapping, a large amount of computational resources is required. Specifically, for any of the previous bootstrap designs, the precision of bootstrapping is limited by rescaling precision. In this paper, we propose a new bootstrapping algorithm of the Cheon-Kim-Kim-Song (CKKS) citeCKKS17 scheme to use a known bootstrapping algorithm repeatedly, so called Meta-BTS. By repeating the original bootstrapping operation twice, one can obtain another bootstrapping with its precision essentially doubled; it can be generalized to be k-fold bootstrapping operations for some k>1 while the ciphertext size is large enough. Our algorithm overcomes the precision limitation given by the rescale operation.

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APA

Bae, Y., Cheon, J. H., Cho, W., Kim, J., & Kim, T. (2022). META-BTS: Bootstrapping Precision Beyond the Limit. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (pp. 223–234). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3548606.3560696

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