Breaking the decisional diffie-hellman problem for class group actions using genus theory

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Abstract

In this paper, we use genus theory to analyze the hardness of the decisional Diffie–Hellman problem (DDH) for ideal class groups of imaginary quadratic orders, acting on sets of elliptic curves through isogenies; such actions are used in the Couveignes–Rostovtsev–Stolbunov protocol and in CSIDH. Concretely, genus theory equips every imaginary quadratic order O with a set of assigned characters χ: cl(O) → {± 1}, and for each such character and every secret ideal class [a] connecting two public elliptic curves E and E' = [a] * E, we show how to compute χ ([a]) given only E and E', i.e. without knowledge of [a]. In practice, this breaks DDH as soon as the class number is even, which is true for a density 1 subset of all imaginary quadratic orders. For instance, our attack works very efficiently for all supersingular elliptic curves over Fp with p ≡ 1 mod 4. Our method relies on computing Tate pairings and walking down isogeny volcanoes.

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Castryck, W., Sotáková, J., & Vercauteren, F. (2020). Breaking the decisional diffie-hellman problem for class group actions using genus theory. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 12171 LNCS, pp. 92–120). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56880-1_4

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