Multiparty computation as a service (MPSaaS) is a promising approach for building privacy-preserving communication systems. However, in this paper, we argue that existing MPC implementations are inadequate for this application as they do not address fairness, let alone robustness. Even a single malicious server can cause the protocol to abort while seeing the output for itself, which in the context of an anonymous communication service would create a vulnerability to censorship and de-anonymization attacks. To remedy this we propose a new MPC implementation, HoneyBadgerMPC, that combines a robust online phase with an optimistic offline phase that is efficient enough to run continuously alongside the online phase. We use HoneyBadgerMPC to develop an application case study, called AsynchroMix, that provides an anonymous broadcast functionality. AsynchroMix features a novel MPC program that trades off between computation and communication, allowing for low-latency message mixing in varying settings. In a cloud-based distributed benchmark with 100 nodes, we demonstrate mixing a batch of 512 messages in around 20 seconds and up to 4096 messages in around two minutes.
CITATION STYLE
Lu, D., Govind, R., Yurek, T., Kate, A., Kulshreshtha, S., & Miller, A. (2019). HoneyBadgerMPC and AsynchroMix: Practical asynchronous MPC and its application to anonymous communication. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (pp. 887–903). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3319535.3354238
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