Public-Key Encryption Resistant to Parameter Subversion and Its Realization from Efficiently-Embeddable Groups

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Abstract

We initiate the study of public-key encryption (PKE) schemes and key-encapsulation mechanisms (KEMs) that retain security even when public parameters (primes, curves) they use may be untrusted and subverted. We define a strong security goal that we call ciphertext pseudo-randomness under parameter subversion attack (CPR-PSA). We also define indistinguishability (of ciphertexts for PKE, and of encapsulated keys from random ones for KEMs) and public-key hiding (also called anonymity) under parameter subversion attack, and show they are implied by CPR-PSA, for both PKE and KEMs. We show that hybrid encryption continues to work in the parameter subversion setting to reduce the design of CPR-PSA PKE to CPR-PSA KEMs and an appropriate form of symmetric encryption. To obtain efficient, elliptic-curve-based KEMs achieving CPR-PSA, we introduce efficiently-embeddable group families and give several constructions from elliptic-curves.

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APA

Auerbach, B., Bellare, M., & Kiltz, E. (2018). Public-Key Encryption Resistant to Parameter Subversion and Its Realization from Efficiently-Embeddable Groups. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10769 LNCS, pp. 348–377). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-76578-5_12

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