Visible to the public Practical "Signatures with Efficient Protocols" from Simple Assumptions

TitlePractical "Signatures with Efficient Protocols" from Simple Assumptions
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsLibert, Benoît, Mouhartem, Fabrice, Peters, Thomas, Yung, Moti
Conference NameProceedings of the 11th ACM on Asia Conference on Computer and Communications Security
PublisherACM
Conference LocationNew York, NY, USA
ISBN Number978-1-4503-4233-9
Keywordsanonymous credentials, digital signatures, efficient privacy-enhancing protocols, group signatures, privacy, pubcrawl, Resiliency, Scalability, signature, signature with efficient protocols, simple cryptographic assumptions
Abstract

Digital signatures are perhaps the most important base for authentication and trust relationships in large scale systems. More specifically, various applications of signatures provide privacy and anonymity preserving mechanisms and protocols, and these, in turn, are becoming critical (due to the recently recognized need to protect individuals according to national rules and regulations). A specific type of signatures called "signatures with efficient protocols", as introduced by Camenisch and Lysyanskaya (CL), efficiently accommodates various basic protocols and extensions like zero-knowledge proofs, signing committed messages, or re-randomizability. These are, in fact, typical operations associated with signatures used in typical anonymity and privacy-preserving scenarios. To date there are no "signatures with efficient protocols" which are based on simple assumptions and truly practical. These two properties assure us a robust primitive: First, simple assumptions are needed for ensuring that this basic primitive is mathematically robust and does not require special ad hoc assumptions that are more risky, imply less efficiency, are more tuned to the protocol itself, and are perhaps less trusted. In the other dimension, efficiency is a must given the anonymity applications of the protocol, since without proper level of efficiency the future adoption of the primitives is always questionable (in spite of their need). In this work, we present a new CL-type signature scheme that is re-randomizable under a simple, well-studied, and by now standard, assumption (SXDH). The signature is efficient (built on the recent QA-NIZK constructions), and is, by design, suitable to work in extended contexts that typify privacy settings (like anonymous credentials, group signature, and offline e-cash). We demonstrate its power by presenting practical protocols based on it.

URLhttp://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2897845.2897898
DOI10.1145/2897845.2897898
Citation Keylibert_practical_2016