[{"page":"126","citation":{"ama":"Kamath Hosdurg C. On the average-case hardness of total search problems. 2020. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896","ista":"Kamath Hosdurg C. 2020. On the average-case hardness of total search problems. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.","apa":"Kamath Hosdurg, C. (2020). On the average-case hardness of total search problems. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896","ieee":"C. Kamath Hosdurg, “On the average-case hardness of total search problems,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.","mla":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan. On the Average-Case Hardness of Total Search Problems. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896.","short":"C. Kamath Hosdurg, On the Average-Case Hardness of Total Search Problems, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020.","chicago":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan. “On the Average-Case Hardness of Total Search Problems.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2020. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896."},"date_published":"2020-05-25T00:00:00Z","day":"25","article_processing_charge":"No","has_accepted_license":"1","ddc":["000"],"status":"public","title":"On the average-case hardness of total search problems","_id":"7896","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","file":[{"date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:48:04Z","date_created":"2020-05-26T14:08:13Z","checksum":"b39e2e1c376f5819b823fb7077491c64","relation":"main_file","file_id":"7897","content_type":"application/pdf","file_size":1622742,"creator":"dernst","file_name":"2020_Thesis_Kamath.pdf","access_level":"open_access"},{"file_name":"Thesis_Kamath.zip","access_level":"closed","content_type":"application/x-zip-compressed","file_size":15301529,"creator":"dernst","relation":"source_file","file_id":"7898","date_created":"2020-05-26T14:08:23Z","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:48:04Z","checksum":"8b26ba729c1a85ac6bea775f5d73cdc7"}],"oa_version":"Published Version","alternative_title":["ISTA Thesis"],"type":"dissertation","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"A search problem lies in the complexity class FNP if a solution to the given instance of the problem can be verified efficiently. The complexity class TFNP consists of all search problems in FNP that are total in the sense that a solution is guaranteed to exist. TFNP contains a host of interesting problems from fields such as algorithmic game theory, computational topology, number theory and combinatorics. Since TFNP is a semantic class, it is unlikely to have a complete problem. Instead, one studies its syntactic subclasses which are defined based on the combinatorial principle used to argue totality. Of particular interest is the subclass PPAD, which contains important problems\r\nlike computing Nash equilibrium for bimatrix games and computational counterparts of several fixed-point theorems as complete. In the thesis, we undertake the study of averagecase hardness of TFNP, and in particular its subclass PPAD.\r\nAlmost nothing was known about average-case hardness of PPAD before a series of recent results showed how to achieve it using a cryptographic primitive called program obfuscation.\r\nHowever, it is currently not known how to construct program obfuscation from standard cryptographic assumptions. Therefore, it is desirable to relax the assumption under which average-case hardness of PPAD can be shown. In the thesis we take a step in this direction. First, we show that assuming the (average-case) hardness of a numbertheoretic\r\nproblem related to factoring of integers, which we call Iterated-Squaring, PPAD is hard-on-average in the random-oracle model. Then we strengthen this result to show that the average-case hardness of PPAD reduces to the (adaptive) soundness of the Fiat-Shamir Transform, a well-known technique used to compile a public-coin interactive protocol into a non-interactive one. As a corollary, we obtain average-case hardness for PPAD in the random-oracle model assuming the worst-case hardness of #SAT. Moreover, the above results can all be strengthened to obtain average-case hardness for the class CLS ⊆ PPAD.\r\nOur main technical contribution is constructing incrementally-verifiable procedures for computing Iterated-Squaring and #SAT. By incrementally-verifiable, we mean that every intermediate state of the computation includes a proof of its correctness, and the proof can be updated and verified in polynomial time. Previous constructions of such procedures relied on strong, non-standard assumptions. Instead, we introduce a technique called recursive proof-merging to obtain the same from weaker assumptions. "}],"project":[{"_id":"258C570E-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"259668","call_identifier":"FP7","name":"Provable Security for Physical Cryptography"},{"_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815","call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks"}],"tmp":{"name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)","legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","short":"CC BY (4.0)","image":"/images/cc_by.png"},"oa":1,"supervisor":[{"full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z","last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"}],"degree_awarded":"PhD","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.15479/AT:ISTA:7896","month":"05","publication_identifier":{"issn":["2663-337X"]},"publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"Institute of Science and Technology Austria","year":"2020","date_updated":"2023-09-07T13:15:55Z","date_created":"2020-05-26T14:08:55Z","author":[{"full_name":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan","id":"4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Kamath Hosdurg","first_name":"Chethan"}],"related_material":{"record":[{"id":"6677","relation":"part_of_dissertation","status":"public"}]},"file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:48:04Z","ec_funded":1},{"ec_funded":1,"volume":27,"date_updated":"2021-01-12T08:05:08Z","date_created":"2019-01-27T22:59:10Z","author":[{"last_name":"Demay","first_name":"Gregory","full_name":"Demay, Gregory"},{"full_name":"Gazi, Peter","id":"3E0BFE38-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Peter","last_name":"Gazi"},{"last_name":"Maurer","first_name":"Ueli","full_name":"Maurer, Ueli"},{"first_name":"Bjorn","last_name":"Tackmann","full_name":"Tackmann, Bjorn"}],"publisher":"IOS Press","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publication_status":"published","year":"2019","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0926227X"]},"month":"01","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.3233/JCS-181131","project":[{"_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815","call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks"}],"quality_controlled":"1","oa":1,"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2016/166","open_access":"1"}],"issue":"1","abstract":[{"text":"Cryptographic security is usually defined as a guarantee that holds except when a bad event with negligible probability occurs, and nothing is guaranteed in that bad case. However, in settings where such failure can happen with substantial probability, one needs to provide guarantees even for the bad case. A typical example is where a (possibly weak) password is used instead of a secure cryptographic key to protect a session, the bad event being that the adversary correctly guesses the password. In a situation with multiple such sessions, a per-session guarantee is desired: any session for which the password has not been guessed remains secure, independently of whether other sessions have been compromised. A new formalism for stating such gracefully degrading security guarantees is introduced and applied to analyze the examples of password-based message authentication and password-based encryption. While a natural per-message guarantee is achieved for authentication, the situation of password-based encryption is more delicate: a per-session confidentiality guarantee only holds against attackers for which the distribution of password-guessing effort over the sessions is known in advance. In contrast, for more general attackers without such a restriction, a strong, composable notion of security cannot be achieved.","lang":"eng"}],"type":"journal_article","oa_version":"Preprint","intvolume":" 27","status":"public","title":"Per-session security: Password-based cryptography revisited","user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","_id":"5887","article_processing_charge":"No","day":"1","scopus_import":"1","date_published":"2019-01-01T00:00:00Z","page":"75-111","article_type":"original","citation":{"apa":"Demay, G., Gazi, P., Maurer, U., & Tackmann, B. (2019). Per-session security: Password-based cryptography revisited. Journal of Computer Security. IOS Press. https://doi.org/10.3233/JCS-181131","ieee":"G. Demay, P. Gazi, U. Maurer, and B. Tackmann, “Per-session security: Password-based cryptography revisited,” Journal of Computer Security, vol. 27, no. 1. IOS Press, pp. 75–111, 2019.","ista":"Demay G, Gazi P, Maurer U, Tackmann B. 2019. Per-session security: Password-based cryptography revisited. Journal of Computer Security. 27(1), 75–111.","ama":"Demay G, Gazi P, Maurer U, Tackmann B. Per-session security: Password-based cryptography revisited. Journal of Computer Security. 2019;27(1):75-111. doi:10.3233/JCS-181131","chicago":"Demay, Gregory, Peter Gazi, Ueli Maurer, and Bjorn Tackmann. “Per-Session Security: Password-Based Cryptography Revisited.” Journal of Computer Security. IOS Press, 2019. https://doi.org/10.3233/JCS-181131.","short":"G. Demay, P. Gazi, U. Maurer, B. Tackmann, Journal of Computer Security 27 (2019) 75–111.","mla":"Demay, Gregory, et al. “Per-Session Security: Password-Based Cryptography Revisited.” Journal of Computer Security, vol. 27, no. 1, IOS Press, 2019, pp. 75–111, doi:10.3233/JCS-181131."},"publication":"Journal of Computer Security"},{"article_number":"60","file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:47:33Z","ec_funded":1,"year":"2019","publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik","author":[{"id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","last_name":"Pietrzak","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"date_created":"2019-06-06T14:12:36Z","date_updated":"2021-01-12T08:07:53Z","volume":124,"month":"01","publication_identifier":{"isbn":["978-3-95977-095-8"],"issn":["1868-8969"]},"oa":1,"tmp":{"name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)","legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","short":"CC BY (4.0)","image":"/images/cc_by.png"},"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/627"}],"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"}],"conference":{"start_date":"2019-01-10","location":"San Diego, CA, United States","end_date":"2019-01-12","name":"ITCS 2019: Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science"},"doi":"10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.60","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"type":"conference","alternative_title":["LIPIcs"],"abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"We construct a verifiable delay function (VDF) by showing how the Rivest-Shamir-Wagner time-lock puzzle can be made publicly verifiable. Concretely, we give a statistically sound public-coin protocol to prove that a tuple (N,x,T,y) satisfies y=x2T (mod N) where the prover doesn’t know the factorization of N and its running time is dominated by solving the puzzle, that is, compute x2T, which is conjectured to require T sequential squarings. To get a VDF we make this protocol non-interactive using the Fiat-Shamir heuristic.The motivation for this work comes from the Chia blockchain design, which uses a VDF as akey ingredient. For typical parameters (T≤2 40, N= 2048), our proofs are of size around 10K B, verification cost around three RSA exponentiations and computing the proof is 8000 times faster than solving the puzzle even without any parallelism."}],"user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","_id":"6528","title":"Simple verifiable delay functions","ddc":["000"],"status":"public","intvolume":" 124","file":[{"checksum":"f0ae1bb161431d9db3dea5ace082bfb5","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:47:33Z","date_created":"2019-06-06T14:22:04Z","file_id":"6529","relation":"main_file","creator":"dernst","file_size":558770,"content_type":"application/pdf","access_level":"open_access","file_name":"2019_LIPIcs_Pietrzak.pdf"}],"oa_version":"Published Version","scopus_import":1,"day":"10","has_accepted_license":"1","article_processing_charge":"No","publication":"10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference","citation":{"chicago":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z. “Simple Verifiable Delay Functions.” In 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference, Vol. 124. Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2019. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.60.","short":"K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference, Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2019.","mla":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z. “Simple Verifiable Delay Functions.” 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference, vol. 124, 60, Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2019, doi:10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.60.","apa":"Pietrzak, K. Z. (2019). Simple verifiable delay functions. In 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (Vol. 124). San Diego, CA, United States: Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.60","ieee":"K. Z. Pietrzak, “Simple verifiable delay functions,” in 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference, San Diego, CA, United States, 2019, vol. 124.","ista":"Pietrzak KZ. 2019. Simple verifiable delay functions. 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference. ITCS 2019: Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science, LIPIcs, vol. 124, 60.","ama":"Pietrzak KZ. Simple verifiable delay functions. In: 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference. Vol 124. Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik; 2019. doi:10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.60"},"date_published":"2019-01-10T00:00:00Z"},{"month":"06","publication_identifier":{"isbn":["978-3-0302-3695-3"],"eisbn":["978-3-0302-3696-0"],"issn":["0302-9743","1611-3349"]},"conference":{"name":"AFRICACRYPT: International Conference on Cryptology in Africa","end_date":"2019-07-11","start_date":"2019-07-09","location":"Rabat, Morocco"},"doi":"10.1007/978-3-030-23696-0_9","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2019/068"}],"oa":1,"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"}],"ec_funded":1,"place":"Cham","author":[{"full_name":"Walter, Michael","last_name":"Walter","first_name":"Michael","orcid":"0000-0003-3186-2482","id":"488F98B0-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"}],"date_updated":"2023-02-23T12:50:15Z","date_created":"2019-07-29T12:25:31Z","volume":11627,"year":"2019","publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"editor":[{"last_name":"Buchmann","first_name":"J","full_name":"Buchmann, J"},{"full_name":"Nitaj, A","last_name":"Nitaj","first_name":"A"},{"full_name":"Rachidi, T","last_name":"Rachidi","first_name":"T"}],"publisher":"Springer Nature","day":"29","article_processing_charge":"No","scopus_import":"1","series_title":"LNCS","date_published":"2019-06-29T00:00:00Z","publication":"Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019","citation":{"ama":"Walter M. Sampling the integers with low relative error. In: Buchmann J, Nitaj A, Rachidi T, eds. Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019. Vol 11627. LNCS. Cham: Springer Nature; 2019:157-180. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-23696-0_9","ista":"Walter M. 2019.Sampling the integers with low relative error. In: Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019. vol. 11627, 157–180.","apa":"Walter, M. (2019). Sampling the integers with low relative error. In J. Buchmann, A. Nitaj, & T. Rachidi (Eds.), Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019 (Vol. 11627, pp. 157–180). Cham: Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-23696-0_9","ieee":"M. Walter, “Sampling the integers with low relative error,” in Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019, vol. 11627, J. Buchmann, A. Nitaj, and T. Rachidi, Eds. Cham: Springer Nature, 2019, pp. 157–180.","mla":"Walter, Michael. “Sampling the Integers with Low Relative Error.” Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019, edited by J Buchmann et al., vol. 11627, Springer Nature, 2019, pp. 157–80, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-23696-0_9.","short":"M. Walter, in:, J. Buchmann, A. Nitaj, T. Rachidi (Eds.), Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019, Springer Nature, Cham, 2019, pp. 157–180.","chicago":"Walter, Michael. “Sampling the Integers with Low Relative Error.” In Progress in Cryptology – AFRICACRYPT 2019, edited by J Buchmann, A Nitaj, and T Rachidi, 11627:157–80. LNCS. Cham: Springer Nature, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-23696-0_9."},"page":"157-180","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"Randomness is an essential part of any secure cryptosystem, but many constructions rely on distributions that are not uniform. This is particularly true for lattice based cryptosystems, which more often than not make use of discrete Gaussian distributions over the integers. For practical purposes it is crucial to evaluate the impact that approximation errors have on the security of a scheme to provide the best possible trade-off between security and performance. Recent years have seen surprising results allowing to use relatively low precision while maintaining high levels of security. A key insight in these results is that sampling a distribution with low relative error can provide very strong security guarantees. Since floating point numbers provide guarantees on the relative approximation error, they seem a suitable tool in this setting, but it is not obvious which sampling algorithms can actually profit from them. While previous works have shown that inversion sampling can be adapted to provide a low relative error (Pöppelmann et al., CHES 2014; Prest, ASIACRYPT 2017), other works have called into question if this is possible for other sampling techniques (Zheng et al., Eprint report 2018/309). In this work, we consider all sampling algorithms that are popular in the cryptographic setting and analyze the relationship of floating point precision and the resulting relative error. We show that all of the algorithms either natively achieve a low relative error or can be adapted to do so."}],"type":"book_chapter","oa_version":"Preprint","_id":"6726","user_id":"8b945eb4-e2f2-11eb-945a-df72226e66a9","title":"Sampling the integers with low relative error","status":"public","intvolume":" 11627"},{"article_number":"8849240","author":[{"last_name":"Skórski","first_name":"Maciej","id":"EC09FA6A-02D0-11E9-8223-86B7C91467DD","full_name":"Skórski, Maciej"}],"date_updated":"2023-09-06T11:15:41Z","date_created":"2019-11-28T10:19:21Z","year":"2019","publisher":"IEEE","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"isbn":["9781538692912"]},"month":"07","doi":"10.1109/isit.2019.8849240","conference":{"name":"ISIT: International Symposium on Information Theory","end_date":"2019-07-12","location":"Paris, France","start_date":"2019-07-07"},"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000489100301043"],"arxiv":["1702.08476"]},"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://arxiv.org/abs/1702.08476"}],"oa":1,"quality_controlled":"1","isi":1,"abstract":[{"text":"It is well established that the notion of min-entropy fails to satisfy the \\emph{chain rule} of the form H(X,Y)=H(X|Y)+H(Y), known for Shannon Entropy. Such a property would help to analyze how min-entropy is split among smaller blocks. Problems of this kind arise for example when constructing extractors and dispersers.\r\nWe show that any sequence of variables exhibits a very strong strong block-source structure (conditional distributions of blocks are nearly flat) when we \\emph{spoil few correlated bits}. This implies, conditioned on the spoiled bits, that \\emph{splitting-recombination properties} hold. In particular, we have many nice properties that min-entropy doesn't obey in general, for example strong chain rules, \"information can't hurt\" inequalities, equivalences of average and worst-case conditional entropy definitions and others. Quantitatively, for any sequence X1,…,Xt of random variables over an alphabet X we prove that, when conditioned on m=t⋅O(loglog|X|+loglog(1/ϵ)+logt) bits of auxiliary information, all conditional distributions of the form Xi|X2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory. IEEE, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1109/isit.2019.8849240.","short":"M. Skórski, in:, 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory, IEEE, 2019.","mla":"Skórski, Maciej. “Strong Chain Rules for Min-Entropy under Few Bits Spoiled.” 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory, 8849240, IEEE, 2019, doi:10.1109/isit.2019.8849240.","apa":"Skórski, M. (2019). Strong chain rules for min-entropy under few bits spoiled. In 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory. Paris, France: IEEE. https://doi.org/10.1109/isit.2019.8849240","ieee":"M. Skórski, “Strong chain rules for min-entropy under few bits spoiled,” in 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory, Paris, France, 2019.","ista":"Skórski M. 2019. Strong chain rules for min-entropy under few bits spoiled. 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory. ISIT: International Symposium on Information Theory, 8849240.","ama":"Skórski M. Strong chain rules for min-entropy under few bits spoiled. In: 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory. IEEE; 2019. doi:10.1109/isit.2019.8849240"},"publication":"2019 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory"},{"doi":"10.1007/978-3-030-17656-3_10","conference":{"name":"International Conference on the Theory and Applications of Cryptographic Techniques","location":"Darmstadt, Germany","start_date":"2019-05-19","end_date":"2019-05-23"},"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000483516200010"]},"oa":1,"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2019/252"}],"project":[{"name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","call_identifier":"H2020","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815"}],"quality_controlled":"1","isi":1,"publication_identifier":{"eissn":["1611-3349"],"isbn":["9783030176556","9783030176563"],"issn":["0302-9743"]},"month":"04","author":[{"full_name":"Abusalah, Hamza M","id":"40297222-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Abusalah","first_name":"Hamza M"},{"id":"4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Kamath Hosdurg","first_name":"Chethan","full_name":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan"},{"full_name":"Klein, Karen","last_name":"Klein","first_name":"Karen","id":"3E83A2F8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","last_name":"Pietrzak"},{"full_name":"Walter, Michael","first_name":"Michael","last_name":"Walter","id":"488F98B0-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000-0003-3186-2482"}],"volume":11477,"date_created":"2020-01-30T09:26:14Z","date_updated":"2023-09-06T15:26:06Z","year":"2019","publisher":"Springer International Publishing","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publication_status":"published","ec_funded":1,"date_published":"2019-04-24T00:00:00Z","citation":{"ama":"Abusalah HM, Kamath Hosdurg C, Klein K, Pietrzak KZ, Walter M. Reversible proofs of sequential work. In: Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019. Vol 11477. Springer International Publishing; 2019:277-291. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-17656-3_10","ieee":"H. M. Abusalah, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K. Klein, K. Z. Pietrzak, and M. Walter, “Reversible proofs of sequential work,” in Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019, Darmstadt, Germany, 2019, vol. 11477, pp. 277–291.","apa":"Abusalah, H. M., Kamath Hosdurg, C., Klein, K., Pietrzak, K. Z., & Walter, M. (2019). Reversible proofs of sequential work. In Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019 (Vol. 11477, pp. 277–291). Darmstadt, Germany: Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17656-3_10","ista":"Abusalah HM, Kamath Hosdurg C, Klein K, Pietrzak KZ, Walter M. 2019. Reversible proofs of sequential work. Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019. International Conference on the Theory and Applications of Cryptographic Techniques, LNCS, vol. 11477, 277–291.","short":"H.M. Abusalah, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K. Klein, K.Z. Pietrzak, M. Walter, in:, Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019, Springer International Publishing, 2019, pp. 277–291.","mla":"Abusalah, Hamza M., et al. “Reversible Proofs of Sequential Work.” Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019, vol. 11477, Springer International Publishing, 2019, pp. 277–91, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-17656-3_10.","chicago":"Abusalah, Hamza M, Chethan Kamath Hosdurg, Karen Klein, Krzysztof Z Pietrzak, and Michael Walter. “Reversible Proofs of Sequential Work.” In Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019, 11477:277–91. Springer International Publishing, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17656-3_10."},"publication":"Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2019","page":"277-291","article_processing_charge":"No","day":"24","scopus_import":"1","oa_version":"Submitted Version","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","_id":"7411","intvolume":" 11477","status":"public","title":"Reversible proofs of sequential work","abstract":[{"text":"Proofs of sequential work (PoSW) are proof systems where a prover, upon receiving a statement χ and a time parameter T computes a proof ϕ(χ,T) which is efficiently and publicly verifiable. The proof can be computed in T sequential steps, but not much less, even by a malicious party having large parallelism. A PoSW thus serves as a proof that T units of time have passed since χ\r\n\r\nwas received.\r\n\r\nPoSW were introduced by Mahmoody, Moran and Vadhan [MMV11], a simple and practical construction was only recently proposed by Cohen and Pietrzak [CP18].\r\n\r\nIn this work we construct a new simple PoSW in the random permutation model which is almost as simple and efficient as [CP18] but conceptually very different. Whereas the structure underlying [CP18] is a hash tree, our construction is based on skip lists and has the interesting property that computing the PoSW is a reversible computation.\r\nThe fact that the construction is reversible can potentially be used for new applications like constructing proofs of replication. We also show how to “embed” the sloth function of Lenstra and Weselowski [LW17] into our PoSW to get a PoSW where one additionally can verify correctness of the output much more efficiently than recomputing it (though recent constructions of “verifiable delay functions” subsume most of the applications this construction was aiming at).","lang":"eng"}],"type":"conference","alternative_title":["LNCS"]},{"ec_funded":1,"related_material":{"record":[{"relation":"dissertation_contains","status":"public","id":"7896"}]},"author":[{"full_name":"Choudhuri, Arka Rai","last_name":"Choudhuri","first_name":"Arka Rai"},{"first_name":"Pavel","last_name":"Hubáček","full_name":"Hubáček, Pavel"},{"full_name":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan","first_name":"Chethan","last_name":"Kamath Hosdurg","id":"4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","last_name":"Pietrzak","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"},{"full_name":"Rosen, Alon","first_name":"Alon","last_name":"Rosen"},{"last_name":"Rothblum","first_name":"Guy N.","full_name":"Rothblum, Guy N."}],"date_created":"2019-07-24T09:20:53Z","date_updated":"2023-09-07T13:15:55Z","year":"2019","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"ACM Press","publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"isbn":["9781450367059"]},"month":"06","doi":"10.1145/3313276.3316400","conference":{"name":"STOC: Symposium on Theory of Computing","end_date":"2019-06-26","start_date":"2019-06-23","location":"Phoenix, AZ, United States"},"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000523199100100"]},"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2019/549"}],"oa":1,"project":[{"name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","call_identifier":"H2020","grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"}],"quality_controlled":"1","isi":1,"abstract":[{"text":"The Fiat-Shamir heuristic transforms a public-coin interactive proof into a non-interactive argument, by replacing the verifier with a cryptographic hash function that is applied to the protocol’s transcript. Constructing hash functions for which this transformation is sound is a central and long-standing open question in cryptography.\r\n\r\nWe show that solving the END−OF−METERED−LINE problem is no easier than breaking the soundness of the Fiat-Shamir transformation when applied to the sumcheck protocol. In particular, if the transformed protocol is sound, then any hard problem in #P gives rise to a hard distribution in the class CLS, which is contained in PPAD. Our result opens up the possibility of sampling moderately-sized games for which it is hard to find a Nash equilibrium, by reducing the inversion of appropriately chosen one-way functions to #SAT.\r\n\r\nOur main technical contribution is a stateful incrementally verifiable procedure that, given a SAT instance over n variables, counts the number of satisfying assignments. This is accomplished via an exponential sequence of small steps, each computable in time poly(n). Incremental verifiability means that each intermediate state includes a sumcheck-based proof of its correctness, and the proof can be updated and verified in time poly(n).","lang":"eng"}],"type":"conference","oa_version":"Preprint","user_id":"4359f0d1-fa6c-11eb-b949-802e58b17ae8","_id":"6677","title":"Finding a Nash equilibrium is no easier than breaking Fiat-Shamir","status":"public","article_processing_charge":"No","day":"01","scopus_import":"1","date_published":"2019-06-01T00:00:00Z","citation":{"short":"A.R. Choudhuri, P. Hubáček, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K.Z. Pietrzak, A. Rosen, G.N. Rothblum, in:, Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019, ACM Press, 2019, pp. 1103–1114.","mla":"Choudhuri, Arka Rai, et al. “Finding a Nash Equilibrium Is No Easier than Breaking Fiat-Shamir.” Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019, ACM Press, 2019, pp. 1103–14, doi:10.1145/3313276.3316400.","chicago":"Choudhuri, Arka Rai, Pavel Hubáček, Chethan Kamath Hosdurg, Krzysztof Z Pietrzak, Alon Rosen, and Guy N. Rothblum. “Finding a Nash Equilibrium Is No Easier than Breaking Fiat-Shamir.” In Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019, 1103–14. ACM Press, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1145/3313276.3316400.","ama":"Choudhuri AR, Hubáček P, Kamath Hosdurg C, Pietrzak KZ, Rosen A, Rothblum GN. Finding a Nash equilibrium is no easier than breaking Fiat-Shamir. In: Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019. ACM Press; 2019:1103-1114. doi:10.1145/3313276.3316400","ieee":"A. R. Choudhuri, P. Hubáček, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K. Z. Pietrzak, A. Rosen, and G. N. Rothblum, “Finding a Nash equilibrium is no easier than breaking Fiat-Shamir,” in Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019, Phoenix, AZ, United States, 2019, pp. 1103–1114.","apa":"Choudhuri, A. R., Hubáček, P., Kamath Hosdurg, C., Pietrzak, K. Z., Rosen, A., & Rothblum, G. N. (2019). Finding a Nash equilibrium is no easier than breaking Fiat-Shamir. In Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019 (pp. 1103–1114). Phoenix, AZ, United States: ACM Press. https://doi.org/10.1145/3313276.3316400","ista":"Choudhuri AR, Hubáček P, Kamath Hosdurg C, Pietrzak KZ, Rosen A, Rothblum GN. 2019. Finding a Nash equilibrium is no easier than breaking Fiat-Shamir. Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019. STOC: Symposium on Theory of Computing, 1103–1114."},"publication":"Proceedings of the 51st Annual ACM SIGACT Symposium on Theory of Computing - STOC 2019","page":"1103-1114"},{"article_processing_charge":"No","day":"06","scopus_import":"1","date_published":"2019-04-06T00:00:00Z","page":"317-346","citation":{"short":"G. Fuchsbauer, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K. Klein, K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, Springer Nature, 2019, pp. 317–346.","mla":"Fuchsbauer, Georg, et al. Adaptively Secure Proxy Re-Encryption. Vol. 11443, Springer Nature, 2019, pp. 317–46, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-17259-6_11.","chicago":"Fuchsbauer, Georg, Chethan Kamath Hosdurg, Karen Klein, and Krzysztof Z Pietrzak. “Adaptively Secure Proxy Re-Encryption,” 11443:317–46. Springer Nature, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17259-6_11.","ama":"Fuchsbauer G, Kamath Hosdurg C, Klein K, Pietrzak KZ. Adaptively secure proxy re-encryption. In: Vol 11443. Springer Nature; 2019:317-346. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-17259-6_11","apa":"Fuchsbauer, G., Kamath Hosdurg, C., Klein, K., & Pietrzak, K. Z. (2019). Adaptively secure proxy re-encryption (Vol. 11443, pp. 317–346). Presented at the PKC: Public-Key Cryptograhy, Beijing, China: Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-17259-6_11","ieee":"G. Fuchsbauer, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K. Klein, and K. Z. Pietrzak, “Adaptively secure proxy re-encryption,” presented at the PKC: Public-Key Cryptograhy, Beijing, China, 2019, vol. 11443, pp. 317–346.","ista":"Fuchsbauer G, Kamath Hosdurg C, Klein K, Pietrzak KZ. 2019. Adaptively secure proxy re-encryption. PKC: Public-Key Cryptograhy, LNCS, vol. 11443, 317–346."},"abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"A proxy re-encryption (PRE) scheme is a public-key encryption scheme that allows the holder of a key pk to derive a re-encryption key for any other key 𝑝𝑘′. This re-encryption key lets anyone transform ciphertexts under pk into ciphertexts under 𝑝𝑘′ without having to know the underlying message, while transformations from 𝑝𝑘′ to pk should not be possible (unidirectional). Security is defined in a multi-user setting against an adversary that gets the users’ public keys and can ask for re-encryption keys and can corrupt users by requesting their secret keys. Any ciphertext that the adversary cannot trivially decrypt given the obtained secret and re-encryption keys should be secure.\r\n\r\nAll existing security proofs for PRE only show selective security, where the adversary must first declare the users it wants to corrupt. This can be lifted to more meaningful adaptive security by guessing the set of corrupted users among the n users, which loses a factor exponential in Open image in new window , rendering the result meaningless already for moderate Open image in new window .\r\n\r\nJafargholi et al. (CRYPTO’17) proposed a framework that in some cases allows to give adaptive security proofs for schemes which were previously only known to be selectively secure, while avoiding the exponential loss that results from guessing the adaptive choices made by an adversary. We apply their framework to PREs that satisfy some natural additional properties. Concretely, we give a more fine-grained reduction for several unidirectional PREs, proving adaptive security at a much smaller loss. The loss depends on the graph of users whose edges represent the re-encryption keys queried by the adversary. For trees and chains the loss is quasi-polynomial in the size and for general graphs it is exponential in their depth and indegree (instead of their size as for previous reductions). Fortunately, trees and low-depth graphs cover many, if not most, interesting applications.\r\n\r\nOur results apply e.g. to the bilinear-map based PRE schemes by Ateniese et al. (NDSS’05 and CT-RSA’09), Gentry’s FHE-based scheme (STOC’09) and the LWE-based scheme by Chandran et al. (PKC’14)."}],"alternative_title":["LNCS"],"type":"conference","oa_version":"Preprint","intvolume":" 11443","title":"Adaptively secure proxy re-encryption","status":"public","_id":"6430","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","publication_identifier":{"issn":["03029743"],"isbn":["9783030172589"],"eissn":["16113349"]},"month":"04","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.1007/978-3-030-17259-6_11","conference":{"end_date":"2019-04-17","location":"Beijing, China","start_date":"2019-04-14","name":"PKC: Public-Key Cryptograhy"},"project":[{"call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815"}],"quality_controlled":"1","oa":1,"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/426"}],"ec_funded":1,"volume":11443,"date_updated":"2023-09-08T11:33:20Z","date_created":"2019-05-13T08:13:46Z","related_material":{"record":[{"status":"public","relation":"dissertation_contains","id":"10035"}]},"author":[{"full_name":"Fuchsbauer, Georg","id":"46B4C3EE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Georg","last_name":"Fuchsbauer"},{"full_name":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan","first_name":"Chethan","last_name":"Kamath Hosdurg","id":"4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"full_name":"Klein, Karen","last_name":"Klein","first_name":"Karen","id":"3E83A2F8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"publisher":"Springer Nature","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publication_status":"published","year":"2019"},{"author":[{"full_name":"Allini, Elie Noumon","last_name":"Allini","first_name":"Elie Noumon"},{"first_name":"Maciej","last_name":"Skórski","id":"EC09FA6A-02D0-11E9-8223-86B7C91467DD","full_name":"Skórski, Maciej"},{"first_name":"Oto","last_name":"Petura","full_name":"Petura, Oto"},{"last_name":"Bernard","first_name":"Florent","full_name":"Bernard, Florent"},{"full_name":"Laban, Marek","first_name":"Marek","last_name":"Laban"},{"first_name":"Viktor","last_name":"Fischer","full_name":"Fischer, Viktor"}],"date_updated":"2021-11-15T10:48:49Z","date_created":"2021-11-14T23:01:25Z","volume":2018,"year":"2018","publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"International Association for Cryptologic Research","file_date_updated":"2021-11-15T10:27:29Z","doi":"10.13154/tches.v2018.i3.214-242","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"tmp":{"name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)","legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","short":"CC BY (4.0)","image":"/images/cc_by.png"},"oa":1,"quality_controlled":"1","month":"01","publication_identifier":{"eissn":["2569-2925"]},"oa_version":"Published Version","file":[{"file_id":"10289","relation":"main_file","date_updated":"2021-11-15T10:27:29Z","date_created":"2021-11-15T10:27:29Z","success":1,"checksum":"b816b848f046c48a8357700d9305dce5","file_name":"2018_IACR_Allini.pdf","access_level":"open_access","creator":"cchlebak","content_type":"application/pdf","file_size":955755}],"user_id":"8b945eb4-e2f2-11eb-945a-df72226e66a9","_id":"10286","status":"public","ddc":["000"],"title":"Evaluation and monitoring of free running oscillators serving as source of randomness","intvolume":" 2018","abstract":[{"text":"In this paper, we evaluate clock signals generated in ring oscillators and self-timed rings and the way their jitter can be transformed into random numbers. We show that counting the periods of the jittery clock signal produces random numbers of significantly better quality than the methods in which the jittery signal is simply sampled (the case in almost all current methods). Moreover, we use the counter values to characterize and continuously monitor the source of randomness. However, instead of using the widely used statistical variance, we propose to use Allan variance to do so. There are two main advantages: Allan variance is insensitive to low frequency noises such as flicker noise that are known to be autocorrelated and significantly less circuitry is required for its computation than that used to compute commonly used variance. We also show that it is essential to use a differential principle of randomness extraction from the jitter based on the use of two identical oscillators to avoid autocorrelations originating from external and internal global jitter sources and that this fact is valid for both kinds of rings. Last but not least, we propose a method of statistical testing based on high order Markov model to show the reduced dependencies when the proposed randomness extraction is applied.","lang":"eng"}],"issue":"3","type":"journal_article","date_published":"2018-01-01T00:00:00Z","publication":"IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems","citation":{"ista":"Allini EN, Skórski M, Petura O, Bernard F, Laban M, Fischer V. 2018. Evaluation and monitoring of free running oscillators serving as source of randomness. IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems. 2018(3), 214–242.","ieee":"E. N. Allini, M. Skórski, O. Petura, F. Bernard, M. Laban, and V. Fischer, “Evaluation and monitoring of free running oscillators serving as source of randomness,” IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems, vol. 2018, no. 3. International Association for Cryptologic Research, pp. 214–242, 2018.","apa":"Allini, E. N., Skórski, M., Petura, O., Bernard, F., Laban, M., & Fischer, V. (2018). Evaluation and monitoring of free running oscillators serving as source of randomness. IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems. International Association for Cryptologic Research. https://doi.org/10.13154/tches.v2018.i3.214-242","ama":"Allini EN, Skórski M, Petura O, Bernard F, Laban M, Fischer V. Evaluation and monitoring of free running oscillators serving as source of randomness. IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems. 2018;2018(3):214-242. doi:10.13154/tches.v2018.i3.214-242","chicago":"Allini, Elie Noumon, Maciej Skórski, Oto Petura, Florent Bernard, Marek Laban, and Viktor Fischer. “Evaluation and Monitoring of Free Running Oscillators Serving as Source of Randomness.” IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems. International Association for Cryptologic Research, 2018. https://doi.org/10.13154/tches.v2018.i3.214-242.","mla":"Allini, Elie Noumon, et al. “Evaluation and Monitoring of Free Running Oscillators Serving as Source of Randomness.” IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems, vol. 2018, no. 3, International Association for Cryptologic Research, 2018, pp. 214–42, doi:10.13154/tches.v2018.i3.214-242.","short":"E.N. Allini, M. Skórski, O. Petura, F. Bernard, M. Laban, V. Fischer, IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems 2018 (2018) 214–242."},"article_type":"original","page":"214-242","day":"01","has_accepted_license":"1","article_processing_charge":"No","scopus_import":"1"},{"type":"conference","alternative_title":["LIPIcs"],"abstract":[{"text":"Proofs of space (PoS) [Dziembowski et al., CRYPTO'15] are proof systems where a prover can convince a verifier that he \"wastes\" disk space. PoS were introduced as a more ecological and economical replacement for proofs of work which are currently used to secure blockchains like Bitcoin. In this work we investigate extensions of PoS which allow the prover to embed useful data into the dedicated space, which later can be recovered. Our first contribution is a security proof for the original PoS from CRYPTO'15 in the random oracle model (the original proof only applied to a restricted class of adversaries which can store a subset of the data an honest prover would store). When this PoS is instantiated with recent constructions of maximally depth robust graphs, our proof implies basically optimal security. As a second contribution we show three different extensions of this PoS where useful data can be embedded into the space required by the prover. Our security proof for the PoS extends (non-trivially) to these constructions. We discuss how some of these variants can be used as proofs of catalytic space (PoCS), a notion we put forward in this work, and which basically is a PoS where most of the space required by the prover can be used to backup useful data. Finally we discuss how one of the extensions is a candidate construction for a proof of replication (PoR), a proof system recently suggested in the Filecoin whitepaper. ","lang":"eng"}],"user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","_id":"7407","title":"Proofs of catalytic space","status":"public","ddc":["000"],"intvolume":" 124","oa_version":"Published Version","file":[{"date_created":"2020-02-04T08:17:52Z","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:47:57Z","checksum":"5cebb7f7849a3beda898f697d755dd96","relation":"main_file","file_id":"7443","content_type":"application/pdf","file_size":822884,"creator":"dernst","file_name":"2018_LIPIcs_Pietrzak.pdf","access_level":"open_access"}],"scopus_import":1,"day":"31","article_processing_charge":"No","has_accepted_license":"1","publication":"10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019)","citation":{"short":"K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019), Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2018, p. 59:1-59:25.","mla":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z. “Proofs of Catalytic Space.” 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019), vol. 124, Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2018, p. 59:1-59:25, doi:10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.59.","chicago":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z. “Proofs of Catalytic Space.” In 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019), 124:59:1-59:25. Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2018. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.59.","ama":"Pietrzak KZ. Proofs of catalytic space. In: 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019). Vol 124. Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik; 2018:59:1-59:25. doi:10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.59","apa":"Pietrzak, K. Z. (2018). Proofs of catalytic space. In 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019) (Vol. 124, p. 59:1-59:25). San Diego, CA, United States: Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.59","ieee":"K. Z. Pietrzak, “Proofs of catalytic space,” in 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019), San Diego, CA, United States, 2018, vol. 124, p. 59:1-59:25.","ista":"Pietrzak KZ. 2018. Proofs of catalytic space. 10th Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science Conference (ITCS 2019). ITCS: Innovations in theoretical Computer Science Conference, LIPIcs, vol. 124, 59:1-59:25."},"page":"59:1-59:25","date_published":"2018-12-31T00:00:00Z","file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:47:57Z","ec_funded":1,"year":"2018","publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik","author":[{"last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"date_created":"2020-01-30T09:16:05Z","date_updated":"2021-01-12T08:13:26Z","volume":124,"month":"12","publication_identifier":{"isbn":["978-3-95977-095-8"],"issn":["1868-8969"]},"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/194"}],"tmp":{"name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)","legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","short":"CC BY (4.0)","image":"/images/cc_by.png"},"oa":1,"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815","call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks"}],"conference":{"name":"ITCS: Innovations in theoretical Computer Science Conference","end_date":"2019-01-12","start_date":"2019-01-10","location":"San Diego, CA, United States"},"doi":"10.4230/LIPICS.ITCS.2019.59","language":[{"iso":"eng"}]},{"date_published":"2018-09-05T00:00:00Z","page":"59","citation":{"chicago":"Abusalah, Hamza M. “Proof Systems for Sustainable Decentralized Cryptocurrencies.” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2018. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:TH_1046.","short":"H.M. Abusalah, Proof Systems for Sustainable Decentralized Cryptocurrencies, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2018.","mla":"Abusalah, Hamza M. Proof Systems for Sustainable Decentralized Cryptocurrencies. Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2018, doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:TH_1046.","ieee":"H. M. Abusalah, “Proof systems for sustainable decentralized cryptocurrencies,” Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 2018.","apa":"Abusalah, H. M. (2018). Proof systems for sustainable decentralized cryptocurrencies. Institute of Science and Technology Austria. https://doi.org/10.15479/AT:ISTA:TH_1046","ista":"Abusalah HM. 2018. Proof systems for sustainable decentralized cryptocurrencies. Institute of Science and Technology Austria.","ama":"Abusalah HM. Proof systems for sustainable decentralized cryptocurrencies. 2018. doi:10.15479/AT:ISTA:TH_1046"},"day":"05","article_processing_charge":"No","has_accepted_license":"1","file":[{"date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:48:11Z","date_created":"2019-04-09T06:43:41Z","checksum":"c4b5f7d111755d1396787f41886fc674","relation":"main_file","file_id":"6245","content_type":"application/pdf","file_size":876241,"creator":"dernst","file_name":"2018_Thesis_Abusalah.pdf","access_level":"open_access"},{"file_id":"6246","relation":"source_file","checksum":"0f382ac56b471c48fd907d63eb87dafe","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:48:11Z","date_created":"2019-04-09T06:43:41Z","access_level":"closed","file_name":"2018_Thesis_Abusalah_source.tar.gz","creator":"dernst","content_type":"application/x-gzip","file_size":2029190}],"oa_version":"Published Version","pubrep_id":"1046","status":"public","ddc":["004"],"title":"Proof systems for sustainable decentralized cryptocurrencies","_id":"83","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","abstract":[{"text":"A proof system is a protocol between a prover and a verifier over a common input in which an honest prover convinces the verifier of the validity of true statements. Motivated by the success of decentralized cryptocurrencies, exemplified by Bitcoin, the focus of this thesis will be on proof systems which found applications in some sustainable alternatives to Bitcoin, such as the Spacemint and Chia cryptocurrencies. In particular, we focus on proofs of space and proofs of sequential work.\r\nProofs of space (PoSpace) were suggested as more ecological, economical, and egalitarian alternative to the energy-wasteful proof-of-work mining of Bitcoin. However, the state-of-the-art constructions of PoSpace are based on sophisticated graph pebbling lower bounds, and are therefore complex. Moreover, when these PoSpace are used in cryptocurrencies like Spacemint, miners can only start mining after ensuring that a commitment to their space is already added in a special transaction to the blockchain. Proofs of sequential work (PoSW) are proof systems in which a prover, upon receiving a statement x and a time parameter T, computes a proof which convinces the verifier that T time units had passed since x was received. Whereas Spacemint assumes synchrony to retain some interesting Bitcoin dynamics, Chia requires PoSW with unique proofs, i.e., PoSW in which it is hard to come up with more than one accepting proof for any true statement. In this thesis we construct simple and practically-efficient PoSpace and PoSW. When using our PoSpace in cryptocurrencies, miners can start mining on the fly, like in Bitcoin, and unlike current constructions of PoSW, which either achieve efficient verification of sequential work, or faster-than-recomputing verification of correctness of proofs, but not both at the same time, ours achieve the best of these two worlds.","lang":"eng"}],"alternative_title":["ISTA Thesis"],"type":"dissertation","degree_awarded":"PhD","supervisor":[{"last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.15479/AT:ISTA:TH_1046","project":[{"grant_number":"259668","_id":"258C570E-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","name":"Provable Security for Physical Cryptography","call_identifier":"FP7"},{"call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815"}],"oa":1,"month":"09","publication_identifier":{"issn":["2663-337X"]},"date_updated":"2023-09-07T12:30:23Z","date_created":"2018-12-11T11:44:32Z","author":[{"full_name":"Abusalah, Hamza M","last_name":"Abusalah","first_name":"Hamza M","id":"40297222-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"}],"related_material":{"record":[{"status":"public","relation":"part_of_dissertation","id":"1229"},{"status":"public","relation":"part_of_dissertation","id":"1235"},{"id":"1236","relation":"part_of_dissertation","status":"public"},{"id":"559","status":"public","relation":"part_of_dissertation"}]},"publication_status":"published","publisher":"Institute of Science and Technology Austria","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"year":"2018","file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:48:11Z","ec_funded":1,"publist_id":"7971"},{"oa_version":"Submitted Version","title":"Inverted leftover hash lemma","status":"public","intvolume":" 2018","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","_id":"108","abstract":[{"text":"Universal hashing found a lot of applications in computer science. In cryptography the most important fact about universal families is the so called Leftover Hash Lemma, proved by Impagliazzo, Levin and Luby. In the language of modern cryptography it states that almost universal families are good extractors. In this work we provide a somewhat surprising characterization in the opposite direction. Namely, every extractor with sufficiently good parameters yields a universal family on a noticeable fraction of its inputs. Our proof technique is based on tools from extremal graph theory applied to the \\'collision graph\\' induced by the extractor, and may be of independent interest. We discuss possible applications to the theory of randomness extractors and non-malleable codes.","lang":"eng"}],"alternative_title":["ISIT Proceedings"],"type":"conference","date_published":"2018-08-16T00:00:00Z","citation":{"apa":"Obremski, M., & Skórski, M. (2018). Inverted leftover hash lemma (Vol. 2018). Presented at the ISIT: International Symposium on Information Theory, Vail, CO, USA: IEEE. https://doi.org/10.1109/ISIT.2018.8437654","ieee":"M. Obremski and M. Skórski, “Inverted leftover hash lemma,” presented at the ISIT: International Symposium on Information Theory, Vail, CO, USA, 2018, vol. 2018.","ista":"Obremski M, Skórski M. 2018. Inverted leftover hash lemma. ISIT: International Symposium on Information Theory, ISIT Proceedings, vol. 2018.","ama":"Obremski M, Skórski M. Inverted leftover hash lemma. In: Vol 2018. IEEE; 2018. doi:10.1109/ISIT.2018.8437654","chicago":"Obremski, Marciej, and Maciej Skórski. “Inverted Leftover Hash Lemma,” Vol. 2018. IEEE, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1109/ISIT.2018.8437654.","short":"M. Obremski, M. Skórski, in:, IEEE, 2018.","mla":"Obremski, Marciej, and Maciej Skórski. Inverted Leftover Hash Lemma. Vol. 2018, IEEE, 2018, doi:10.1109/ISIT.2018.8437654."},"day":"16","article_processing_charge":"No","scopus_import":"1","date_created":"2018-12-11T11:44:40Z","date_updated":"2023-09-13T08:23:18Z","volume":2018,"author":[{"last_name":"Obremski","first_name":"Marciej","full_name":"Obremski, Marciej"},{"id":"EC09FA6A-02D0-11E9-8223-86B7C91467DD","first_name":"Maciej","last_name":"Skorski","full_name":"Skorski, Maciej"}],"publication_status":"published","publisher":"IEEE","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"year":"2018","publist_id":"7946","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"conference":{"name":"ISIT: International Symposium on Information Theory","start_date":"2018-06-17 ","location":"Vail, CO, USA","end_date":"2018-06-22"},"doi":"10.1109/ISIT.2018.8437654","quality_controlled":"1","isi":1,"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2017/507"}],"oa":1,"external_id":{"isi":["000448139300368"]},"month":"08"},{"day":"01","article_processing_charge":"No","scopus_import":"1","date_published":"2018-08-01T00:00:00Z","article_type":"original","publication":"Journal of the ACM","citation":{"ama":"Dziembowski S, Pietrzak KZ, Wichs D. Non-malleable codes. Journal of the ACM. 2018;65(4). doi:10.1145/3178432","ieee":"S. Dziembowski, K. Z. Pietrzak, and D. Wichs, “Non-malleable codes,” Journal of the ACM, vol. 65, no. 4. ACM, 2018.","apa":"Dziembowski, S., Pietrzak, K. Z., & Wichs, D. (2018). Non-malleable codes. Journal of the ACM. ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/3178432","ista":"Dziembowski S, Pietrzak KZ, Wichs D. 2018. Non-malleable codes. Journal of the ACM. 65(4), 20.","short":"S. Dziembowski, K.Z. Pietrzak, D. Wichs, Journal of the ACM 65 (2018).","mla":"Dziembowski, Stefan, et al. “Non-Malleable Codes.” Journal of the ACM, vol. 65, no. 4, 20, ACM, 2018, doi:10.1145/3178432.","chicago":"Dziembowski, Stefan, Krzysztof Z Pietrzak, and Daniel Wichs. “Non-Malleable Codes.” Journal of the ACM. ACM, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1145/3178432."},"abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"We introduce the notion of “non-malleable codes” which relaxes the notion of error correction and error detection. Informally, a code is non-malleable if the message contained in a modified codeword is either the original message, or a completely unrelated value. In contrast to error correction and error detection, non-malleability can be achieved for very rich classes of modifications. We construct an efficient code that is non-malleable with respect to modifications that affect each bit of the codeword arbitrarily (i.e., leave it untouched, flip it, or set it to either 0 or 1), but independently of the value of the other bits of the codeword. Using the probabilistic method, we also show a very strong and general statement: there exists a non-malleable code for every “small enough” family F of functions via which codewords can be modified. Although this probabilistic method argument does not directly yield efficient constructions, it gives us efficient non-malleable codes in the random-oracle model for very general classes of tampering functions—e.g., functions where every bit in the tampered codeword can depend arbitrarily on any 99% of the bits in the original codeword. As an application of non-malleable codes, we show that they provide an elegant algorithmic solution to the task of protecting functionalities implemented in hardware (e.g., signature cards) against “tampering attacks.” In such attacks, the secret state of a physical system is tampered, in the hopes that future interaction with the modified system will reveal some secret information. This problem was previously studied in the work of Gennaro et al. in 2004 under the name “algorithmic tamper proof security” (ATP). We show that non-malleable codes can be used to achieve important improvements over the prior work. In particular, we show that any functionality can be made secure against a large class of tampering attacks, simply by encoding the secret state with a non-malleable code while it is stored in memory."}],"issue":"4","type":"journal_article","oa_version":"Preprint","title":"Non-malleable codes","status":"public","intvolume":" 65","_id":"107","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","month":"08","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.1145/3178432","isi":1,"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks"},{"call_identifier":"FP7","name":"Provable Security for Physical Cryptography","_id":"258C570E-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"259668"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000442938200004"]},"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2009/608","open_access":"1"}],"oa":1,"publist_id":"7947","ec_funded":1,"article_number":"20","date_created":"2018-12-11T11:44:40Z","date_updated":"2023-09-13T09:05:17Z","volume":65,"author":[{"last_name":"Dziembowski","first_name":"Stefan","full_name":"Dziembowski, Stefan"},{"full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","last_name":"Pietrzak"},{"first_name":"Daniel","last_name":"Wichs","full_name":"Wichs, Daniel"}],"publication_status":"published","publisher":"ACM","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"year":"2018"},{"scopus_import":"1","day":"01","article_processing_charge":"No","page":"51 - 65","publication":"Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security","citation":{"ieee":"J. F. Alwen et al., “On the memory hardness of data independent password hashing functions,” in Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security, Incheon, Republic of Korea, 2018, pp. 51–65.","apa":"Alwen, J. F., Gazi, P., Kamath Hosdurg, C., Klein, K., Osang, G. F., Pietrzak, K. Z., … Rybar, M. (2018). On the memory hardness of data independent password hashing functions. In Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security (pp. 51–65). Incheon, Republic of Korea: ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/3196494.3196534","ista":"Alwen JF, Gazi P, Kamath Hosdurg C, Klein K, Osang GF, Pietrzak KZ, Reyzin L, Rolinek M, Rybar M. 2018. On the memory hardness of data independent password hashing functions. Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security. ASIACCS: Asia Conference on Computer and Communications Security , 51–65.","ama":"Alwen JF, Gazi P, Kamath Hosdurg C, et al. On the memory hardness of data independent password hashing functions. In: Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security. ACM; 2018:51-65. doi:10.1145/3196494.3196534","chicago":"Alwen, Joel F, Peter Gazi, Chethan Kamath Hosdurg, Karen Klein, Georg F Osang, Krzysztof Z Pietrzak, Lenoid Reyzin, Michal Rolinek, and Michal Rybar. “On the Memory Hardness of Data Independent Password Hashing Functions.” In Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security, 51–65. ACM, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1145/3196494.3196534.","short":"J.F. Alwen, P. Gazi, C. Kamath Hosdurg, K. Klein, G.F. Osang, K.Z. Pietrzak, L. Reyzin, M. Rolinek, M. Rybar, in:, Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security, ACM, 2018, pp. 51–65.","mla":"Alwen, Joel F., et al. “On the Memory Hardness of Data Independent Password Hashing Functions.” Proceedings of the 2018 on Asia Conference on Computer and Communication Security, ACM, 2018, pp. 51–65, doi:10.1145/3196494.3196534."},"date_published":"2018-06-01T00:00:00Z","type":"conference","abstract":[{"text":"We show attacks on five data-independent memory-hard functions (iMHF) that were submitted to the password hashing competition (PHC). Informally, an MHF is a function which cannot be evaluated on dedicated hardware, like ASICs, at significantly lower hardware and/or energy cost than evaluating a single instance on a standard single-core architecture. Data-independent means the memory access pattern of the function is independent of the input; this makes iMHFs harder to construct than data-dependent ones, but the latter can be attacked by various side-channel attacks. Following [Alwen-Blocki'16], we capture the evaluation of an iMHF as a directed acyclic graph (DAG). The cumulative parallel pebbling complexity of this DAG is a measure for the hardware cost of evaluating the iMHF on an ASIC. Ideally, one would like the complexity of a DAG underlying an iMHF to be as close to quadratic in the number of nodes of the graph as possible. Instead, we show that (the DAGs underlying) the following iMHFs are far from this bound: Rig.v2, TwoCats and Gambit each having an exponent no more than 1.75. Moreover, we show that the complexity of the iMHF modes of the PHC finalists Pomelo and Lyra2 have exponents at most 1.83 and 1.67 respectively. To show this we investigate a combinatorial property of each underlying DAG (called its depth-robustness. By establishing upper bounds on this property we are then able to apply the general technique of [Alwen-Block'16] for analyzing the hardware costs of an iMHF.","lang":"eng"}],"status":"public","title":"On the memory hardness of data independent password hashing functions","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","_id":"193","oa_version":"Submitted Version","month":"06","isi":1,"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"call_identifier":"FP7","name":"Discrete Optimization in Computer Vision: Theory and Practice","_id":"25FBA906-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"616160"},{"grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","call_identifier":"H2020"}],"oa":1,"external_id":{"isi":["000516620100005"]},"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2016/783","open_access":"1"}],"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"conference":{"name":"ASIACCS: Asia Conference on Computer and Communications Security ","start_date":"2018-06-04","location":"Incheon, Republic of Korea","end_date":"2018-06-08"},"doi":"10.1145/3196494.3196534","publist_id":"7723","ec_funded":1,"publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"},{"_id":"HeEd"},{"_id":"VlKo"}],"publisher":"ACM","year":"2018","acknowledgement":"Leonid Reyzin was supported in part by IST Austria and by US NSF grants 1012910, 1012798, and 1422965; this research was performed while he was visiting IST Austria.","date_created":"2018-12-11T11:45:07Z","date_updated":"2023-09-13T09:13:12Z","author":[{"first_name":"Joel F","last_name":"Alwen","id":"2A8DFA8C-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","full_name":"Alwen, Joel F"},{"first_name":"Peter","last_name":"Gazi","full_name":"Gazi, Peter"},{"full_name":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan","first_name":"Chethan","last_name":"Kamath Hosdurg","id":"4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"id":"3E83A2F8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Karen","last_name":"Klein","full_name":"Klein, Karen"},{"full_name":"Osang, Georg F","last_name":"Osang","first_name":"Georg F","orcid":"0000-0002-8882-5116","id":"464B40D6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"},{"full_name":"Reyzin, Lenoid","first_name":"Lenoid","last_name":"Reyzin"},{"id":"3CB3BC06-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Rolinek","first_name":"Michal","full_name":"Rolinek, Michal"},{"id":"2B3E3DE8-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Michal","last_name":"Rybar","full_name":"Rybar, Michal"}]},{"month":"03","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.1007/978-3-319-78381-9_1","conference":{"name":"Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology","end_date":"2018-05-03","start_date":"2018-04-29","location":"Tel Aviv, Israel"},"project":[{"name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","call_identifier":"H2020","grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"}],"isi":1,"quality_controlled":"1","oa":1,"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/077","open_access":"1"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000517097500001"]},"ec_funded":1,"publist_id":"7581","volume":10820,"date_updated":"2023-09-13T09:12:04Z","date_created":"2018-12-11T11:45:42Z","author":[{"first_name":"Daniele","last_name":"Micciancio","full_name":"Micciancio, Daniele"},{"full_name":"Walter, Michael","last_name":"Walter","first_name":"Michael","orcid":"0000-0003-3186-2482","id":"488F98B0-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"}],"department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"Springer","publication_status":"published","acknowledgement":"Research supported in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the U.S. Army Research Office under the SafeWare program. Opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views, position or policy of the Government. The second author was also supported by the European Research Council, ERC consolidator grant (682815 - TOCNeT).","year":"2018","article_processing_charge":"No","day":"31","scopus_import":"1","date_published":"2018-03-31T00:00:00Z","page":"3 - 28","citation":{"ama":"Micciancio D, Walter M. On the bit security of cryptographic primitives. In: Vol 10820. Springer; 2018:3-28. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78381-9_1","apa":"Micciancio, D., & Walter, M. (2018). On the bit security of cryptographic primitives (Vol. 10820, pp. 3–28). Presented at the Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology, Tel Aviv, Israel: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78381-9_1","ieee":"D. Micciancio and M. Walter, “On the bit security of cryptographic primitives,” presented at the Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2018, vol. 10820, pp. 3–28.","ista":"Micciancio D, Walter M. 2018. On the bit security of cryptographic primitives. Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology, LNCS, vol. 10820, 3–28.","short":"D. Micciancio, M. Walter, in:, Springer, 2018, pp. 3–28.","mla":"Micciancio, Daniele, and Michael Walter. On the Bit Security of Cryptographic Primitives. Vol. 10820, Springer, 2018, pp. 3–28, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78381-9_1.","chicago":"Micciancio, Daniele, and Michael Walter. “On the Bit Security of Cryptographic Primitives,” 10820:3–28. Springer, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78381-9_1."},"abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"We introduce a formal quantitative notion of “bit security” for a general type of cryptographic games (capturing both decision and search problems), aimed at capturing the intuition that a cryptographic primitive with k-bit security is as hard to break as an ideal cryptographic function requiring a brute force attack on a k-bit key space. Our new definition matches the notion of bit security commonly used by cryptographers and cryptanalysts when studying search (e.g., key recovery) problems, where the use of the traditional definition is well established. However, it produces a quantitatively different metric in the case of decision (indistinguishability) problems, where the use of (a straightforward generalization of) the traditional definition is more problematic and leads to a number of paradoxical situations or mismatches between theoretical/provable security and practical/common sense intuition. Key to our new definition is to consider adversaries that may explicitly declare failure of the attack. We support and justify the new definition by proving a number of technical results, including tight reductions between several standard cryptographic problems, a new hybrid theorem that preserves bit security, and an application to the security analysis of indistinguishability primitives making use of (approximate) floating point numbers. This is the first result showing that (standard precision) 53-bit floating point numbers can be used to achieve 100-bit security in the context of cryptographic primitives with general indistinguishability-based security definitions. Previous results of this type applied only to search problems, or special types of decision problems."}],"alternative_title":["LNCS"],"type":"conference","oa_version":"Submitted Version","intvolume":" 10820","title":"On the bit security of cryptographic primitives","status":"public","_id":"300","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1"},{"day":"29","article_processing_charge":"No","scopus_import":"1","date_published":"2018-05-29T00:00:00Z","citation":{"ama":"Cohen B, Pietrzak KZ. Simple proofs of sequential work. In: Vol 10821. Springer; 2018:451-467. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_15","ieee":"B. Cohen and K. Z. Pietrzak, “Simple proofs of sequential work,” presented at the Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2018, vol. 10821, pp. 451–467.","apa":"Cohen, B., & Pietrzak, K. Z. (2018). Simple proofs of sequential work (Vol. 10821, pp. 451–467). Presented at the Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology, Tel Aviv, Israel: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_15","ista":"Cohen B, Pietrzak KZ. 2018. Simple proofs of sequential work. Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology, LNCS, vol. 10821, 451–467.","short":"B. Cohen, K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, Springer, 2018, pp. 451–467.","mla":"Cohen, Bram, and Krzysztof Z. Pietrzak. Simple Proofs of Sequential Work. Vol. 10821, Springer, 2018, pp. 451–67, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_15.","chicago":"Cohen, Bram, and Krzysztof Z Pietrzak. “Simple Proofs of Sequential Work,” 10821:451–67. Springer, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_15."},"page":"451 - 467","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"At ITCS 2013, Mahmoody, Moran and Vadhan [MMV13] introduce and construct publicly verifiable proofs of sequential work, which is a protocol for proving that one spent sequential computational work related to some statement. The original motivation for such proofs included non-interactive time-stamping and universally verifiable CPU benchmarks. A more recent application, and our main motivation, are blockchain designs, where proofs of sequential work can be used – in combination with proofs of space – as a more ecological and economical substitute for proofs of work which are currently used to secure Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. The construction proposed by [MMV13] is based on a hash function and can be proven secure in the random oracle model, or assuming inherently sequential hash-functions, which is a new standard model assumption introduced in their work. In a proof of sequential work, a prover gets a “statement” χ, a time parameter N and access to a hash-function H, which for the security proof is modelled as a random oracle. Correctness requires that an honest prover can make a verifier accept making only N queries to H, while soundness requires that any prover who makes the verifier accept must have made (almost) N sequential queries to H. Thus a solution constitutes a proof that N time passed since χ was received. Solutions must be publicly verifiable in time at most polylogarithmic in N. The construction of [MMV13] is based on “depth-robust” graphs, and as a consequence has rather poor concrete parameters. But the major drawback is that the prover needs not just N time, but also N space to compute a proof. In this work we propose a proof of sequential work which is much simpler, more efficient and achieves much better concrete bounds. Most importantly, the space required can be as small as log (N) (but we get better soundness using slightly more memory than that). An open problem stated by [MMV13] that our construction does not solve either is achieving a “unique” proof, where even a cheating prover can only generate a single accepting proof. This property would be extremely useful for applications to blockchains."}],"type":"conference","alternative_title":["LNCS"],"oa_version":"Submitted Version","_id":"302","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","title":"Simple proofs of sequential work","status":"public","intvolume":" 10821","month":"05","conference":{"end_date":"2018-05-03","start_date":"2018-04-29","location":"Tel Aviv, Israel","name":"Eurocrypt: Advances in Cryptology"},"doi":"10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_15","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"oa":1,"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/183.pdf"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000517098700015"]},"isi":1,"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815","call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks"}],"ec_funded":1,"publist_id":"7579","author":[{"full_name":"Cohen, Bram","first_name":"Bram","last_name":"Cohen"},{"orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"date_created":"2018-12-11T11:45:42Z","date_updated":"2023-09-18T09:29:33Z","volume":10821,"year":"2018","publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"Springer"},{"month":"03","quality_controlled":"1","isi":1,"project":[{"_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425","grant_number":"682815","call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks"}],"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://arxiv.org/abs/1705.05313","open_access":"1"}],"external_id":{"arxiv":["1705.05313"],"isi":["000517098700004"]},"oa":1,"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"conference":{"name":"Eurocrypt 2018: Advances in Cryptology","location":"Tel Aviv, Israel","start_date":"2018-04-29","end_date":"2018-05-03"},"doi":"10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_4","publist_id":"7583","ec_funded":1,"publication_status":"published","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"publisher":"Springer","year":"2018","date_updated":"2023-09-19T09:59:30Z","date_created":"2018-12-11T11:45:41Z","volume":10821,"author":[{"full_name":"Alwen, Joel F","last_name":"Alwen","first_name":"Joel F","id":"2A8DFA8C-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87"},{"last_name":"Blocki","first_name":"Jeremiah","full_name":"Blocki, Jeremiah"},{"id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","last_name":"Pietrzak","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"scopus_import":"1","day":"31","article_processing_charge":"No","page":"99 - 130","citation":{"ista":"Alwen JF, Blocki J, Pietrzak KZ. 2018. Sustained space complexity. Eurocrypt 2018: Advances in Cryptology, LNCS, vol. 10821, 99–130.","apa":"Alwen, J. F., Blocki, J., & Pietrzak, K. Z. (2018). Sustained space complexity (Vol. 10821, pp. 99–130). Presented at the Eurocrypt 2018: Advances in Cryptology, Tel Aviv, Israel: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_4","ieee":"J. F. Alwen, J. Blocki, and K. Z. Pietrzak, “Sustained space complexity,” presented at the Eurocrypt 2018: Advances in Cryptology, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2018, vol. 10821, pp. 99–130.","ama":"Alwen JF, Blocki J, Pietrzak KZ. Sustained space complexity. In: Vol 10821. Springer; 2018:99-130. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_4","chicago":"Alwen, Joel F, Jeremiah Blocki, and Krzysztof Z Pietrzak. “Sustained Space Complexity,” 10821:99–130. Springer, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_4.","mla":"Alwen, Joel F., et al. Sustained Space Complexity. Vol. 10821, Springer, 2018, pp. 99–130, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-78375-8_4.","short":"J.F. Alwen, J. Blocki, K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, Springer, 2018, pp. 99–130."},"date_published":"2018-03-31T00:00:00Z","alternative_title":["LNCS"],"type":"conference","abstract":[{"text":"Memory-hard functions (MHF) are functions whose evaluation cost is dominated by memory cost. MHFs are egalitarian, in the sense that evaluating them on dedicated hardware (like FPGAs or ASICs) is not much cheaper than on off-the-shelf hardware (like x86 CPUs). MHFs have interesting cryptographic applications, most notably to password hashing and securing blockchains.\r\n\r\nAlwen and Serbinenko [STOC’15] define the cumulative memory complexity (cmc) of a function as the sum (over all time-steps) of the amount of memory required to compute the function. They advocate that a good MHF must have high cmc. Unlike previous notions, cmc takes into account that dedicated hardware might exploit amortization and parallelism. Still, cmc has been critizised as insufficient, as it fails to capture possible time-memory trade-offs; as memory cost doesn’t scale linearly, functions with the same cmc could still have very different actual hardware cost.\r\n\r\nIn this work we address this problem, and introduce the notion of sustained-memory complexity, which requires that any algorithm evaluating the function must use a large amount of memory for many steps. We construct functions (in the parallel random oracle model) whose sustained-memory complexity is almost optimal: our function can be evaluated using n steps and O(n/log(n)) memory, in each step making one query to the (fixed-input length) random oracle, while any algorithm that can make arbitrary many parallel queries to the random oracle, still needs Ω(n/log(n)) memory for Ω(n) steps.\r\n\r\nAs has been done for various notions (including cmc) before, we reduce the task of constructing an MHFs with high sustained-memory complexity to proving pebbling lower bounds on DAGs. Our main technical contribution is the construction is a family of DAGs on n nodes with constant indegree with high “sustained-space complexity”, meaning that any parallel black-pebbling strategy requires Ω(n/log(n)) pebbles for at least Ω(n) steps.\r\n\r\nAlong the way we construct a family of maximally “depth-robust” DAGs with maximum indegree O(logn) , improving upon the construction of Mahmoody et al. [ITCS’13] which had maximum indegree O(log2n⋅","lang":"eng"}],"status":"public","title":"Sustained space complexity","intvolume":" 10821","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","_id":"298","oa_version":"Preprint"},{"publication":"American Institute of Mathematical Sciences","external_id":{"isi":["000430950400002"]},"citation":{"ieee":"S. Chatterjee, C. Kamath Hosdurg, and V. Kumar, “Private set-intersection with common set-up,” American Institute of Mathematical Sciences, vol. 12, no. 1. AIMS, pp. 17–47, 2018.","apa":"Chatterjee, S., Kamath Hosdurg, C., & Kumar, V. (2018). Private set-intersection with common set-up. American Institute of Mathematical Sciences. AIMS. https://doi.org/10.3934/amc.2018002","ista":"Chatterjee S, Kamath Hosdurg C, Kumar V. 2018. Private set-intersection with common set-up. American Institute of Mathematical Sciences. 12(1), 17–47.","ama":"Chatterjee S, Kamath Hosdurg C, Kumar V. Private set-intersection with common set-up. American Institute of Mathematical Sciences. 2018;12(1):17-47. doi:10.3934/amc.2018002","chicago":"Chatterjee, Sanjit, Chethan Kamath Hosdurg, and Vikas Kumar. “Private Set-Intersection with Common Set-Up.” American Institute of Mathematical Sciences. AIMS, 2018. https://doi.org/10.3934/amc.2018002.","short":"S. Chatterjee, C. Kamath Hosdurg, V. Kumar, American Institute of Mathematical Sciences 12 (2018) 17–47.","mla":"Chatterjee, Sanjit, et al. “Private Set-Intersection with Common Set-Up.” American Institute of Mathematical Sciences, vol. 12, no. 1, AIMS, 2018, pp. 17–47, doi:10.3934/amc.2018002."},"isi":1,"quality_controlled":"1","page":"17-47","date_published":"2018-02-01T00:00:00Z","doi":"10.3934/amc.2018002","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"scopus_import":"1","day":"01","month":"02","article_processing_charge":"No","_id":"5980","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","year":"2018","status":"public","publication_status":"published","title":"Private set-intersection with common set-up","publisher":"AIMS","intvolume":" 12","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"author":[{"full_name":"Chatterjee, Sanjit","last_name":"Chatterjee","first_name":"Sanjit"},{"id":"4BD3F30E-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","last_name":"Kamath Hosdurg","first_name":"Chethan","full_name":"Kamath Hosdurg, Chethan"},{"first_name":"Vikas","last_name":"Kumar","full_name":"Kumar, Vikas"}],"date_updated":"2023-09-19T14:27:59Z","date_created":"2019-02-13T13:49:41Z","volume":12,"oa_version":"None","type":"journal_article","abstract":[{"text":"The problem of private set-intersection (PSI) has been traditionally treated as an instance of the more general problem of multi-party computation (MPC). Consequently, in order to argue security, or compose these protocols one has to rely on the general theory that was developed for the purpose of MPC. The pursuit of efficient protocols, however, has resulted in designs that exploit properties pertaining to PSI. In almost all practical applications where a PSI protocol is deployed, it is expected to be executed multiple times, possibly on related inputs. In this work we initiate a dedicated study of PSI in the multi-interaction (MI) setting. In this model a server sets up the common system parameters and executes set-intersection multiple times with potentially different clients. We discuss a few attacks that arise when protocols are naïvely composed in this manner and, accordingly, craft security definitions for the MI setting and study their inter-relation. Finally, we suggest a set of protocols that are MI-secure, at the same time almost as efficient as their parent, stand-alone, protocols.","lang":"eng"}],"issue":"1"},{"scopus_import":"1","day":"07","article_processing_charge":"No","page":"480-499","publication":"22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security","citation":{"ama":"Park S, Kwon A, Fuchsbauer G, Gazi P, Alwen JF, Pietrzak KZ. SpaceMint: A cryptocurrency based on proofs of space. In: 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security. Vol 10957. Springer Nature; 2018:480-499. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-58387-6_26","ieee":"S. Park, A. Kwon, G. Fuchsbauer, P. Gazi, J. F. Alwen, and K. Z. Pietrzak, “SpaceMint: A cryptocurrency based on proofs of space,” in 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security, Nieuwpoort, Curacao, 2018, vol. 10957, pp. 480–499.","apa":"Park, S., Kwon, A., Fuchsbauer, G., Gazi, P., Alwen, J. F., & Pietrzak, K. Z. (2018). SpaceMint: A cryptocurrency based on proofs of space. In 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security (Vol. 10957, pp. 480–499). Nieuwpoort, Curacao: Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-58387-6_26","ista":"Park S, Kwon A, Fuchsbauer G, Gazi P, Alwen JF, Pietrzak KZ. 2018. SpaceMint: A cryptocurrency based on proofs of space. 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security. FC: Financial Cryptography and Data Security, LNCS, vol. 10957, 480–499.","short":"S. Park, A. Kwon, G. Fuchsbauer, P. Gazi, J.F. Alwen, K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security, Springer Nature, 2018, pp. 480–499.","mla":"Park, Sunoo, et al. “SpaceMint: A Cryptocurrency Based on Proofs of Space.” 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security, vol. 10957, Springer Nature, 2018, pp. 480–99, doi:10.1007/978-3-662-58387-6_26.","chicago":"Park, Sunoo, Albert Kwon, Georg Fuchsbauer, Peter Gazi, Joel F Alwen, and Krzysztof Z Pietrzak. “SpaceMint: A Cryptocurrency Based on Proofs of Space.” In 22nd International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security, 10957:480–99. Springer Nature, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-58387-6_26."},"date_published":"2018-12-07T00:00:00Z","alternative_title":["LNCS"],"type":"conference","abstract":[{"text":"Bitcoin has become the most successful cryptocurrency ever deployed, and its most distinctive feature is that it is decentralized. Its underlying protocol (Nakamoto consensus) achieves this by using proof of work, which has the drawback that it causes the consumption of vast amounts of energy to maintain the ledger. Moreover, Bitcoin mining dynamics have become less distributed over time.\r\n\r\nTowards addressing these issues, we propose SpaceMint, a cryptocurrency based on proofs of space instead of proofs of work. Miners in SpaceMint dedicate disk space rather than computation. We argue that SpaceMint’s design solves or alleviates several of Bitcoin’s issues: most notably, its large energy consumption. SpaceMint also rewards smaller miners fairly according to their contribution to the network, thus incentivizing more distributed participation.\r\n\r\nThis paper adapts proof of space to enable its use in cryptocurrency, studies the attacks that can arise against a Bitcoin-like blockchain that uses proof of space, and proposes a new blockchain format and transaction types to address these attacks. Our prototype shows that initializing 1 TB for mining takes about a day (a one-off setup cost), and miners spend on average just a fraction of a second per block mined. Finally, we provide a game-theoretic analysis modeling SpaceMint as an extensive game (the canonical game-theoretic notion for games that take place over time) and show that this stylized game satisfies a strong equilibrium notion, thereby arguing for SpaceMint ’s stability and consensus.","lang":"eng"}],"title":"SpaceMint: A cryptocurrency based on proofs of space","status":"public","intvolume":" 10957","user_id":"c635000d-4b10-11ee-a964-aac5a93f6ac1","_id":"6941","oa_version":"Submitted Version","month":"12","publication_identifier":{"isbn":["9783662583869","9783662583876"],"eissn":["1611-3349"],"issn":["0302-9743"]},"isi":1,"quality_controlled":"1","project":[{"call_identifier":"H2020","name":"Teaching Old Crypto New Tricks","grant_number":"682815","_id":"258AA5B2-B435-11E9-9278-68D0E5697425"}],"external_id":{"isi":["000540656400026"]},"oa":1,"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2015/528","open_access":"1"}],"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"conference":{"end_date":"2018-03-02","start_date":"2018-02-26","location":"Nieuwpoort, Curacao","name":"FC: Financial Cryptography and Data Security"},"doi":"10.1007/978-3-662-58387-6_26","ec_funded":1,"publication_status":"published","publisher":"Springer Nature","department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"year":"2018","date_created":"2019-10-14T06:35:38Z","date_updated":"2023-09-19T15:02:13Z","volume":10957,"author":[{"full_name":"Park, Sunoo","first_name":"Sunoo","last_name":"Park"},{"full_name":"Kwon, Albert","first_name":"Albert","last_name":"Kwon"},{"id":"46B4C3EE-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Georg","last_name":"Fuchsbauer","full_name":"Fuchsbauer, Georg"},{"full_name":"Gazi, Peter","id":"3E0BFE38-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Peter","last_name":"Gazi"},{"full_name":"Alwen, Joel F","id":"2A8DFA8C-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","first_name":"Joel F","last_name":"Alwen"},{"last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}]},{"month":"01","publication_identifier":{"issn":["18688969"]},"oa":1,"tmp":{"name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)","legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","short":"CC BY (4.0)","image":"/images/cc_by.png"},"quality_controlled":"1","conference":{"name":"ITCS: Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science","location":"Berkeley, CA, United States","start_date":"2017-01-09","end_date":"2017-01-11"},"doi":"10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2017.38","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"file_date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:44:37Z","publist_id":"6179","year":"2017","publication_status":"published","publisher":"Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik","editor":[{"full_name":"Papadimitriou, Christos","first_name":"Christos","last_name":"Papadimitriou"}],"department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"author":[{"last_name":"Alwen","first_name":"Joel F","id":"2A8DFA8C-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","full_name":"Alwen, Joel F"},{"full_name":"De Rezende, Susanna","last_name":"De Rezende","first_name":"Susanna"},{"first_name":"Jakob","last_name":"Nordstrom","full_name":"Nordstrom, Jakob"},{"first_name":"Marc","last_name":"Vinyals","full_name":"Vinyals, Marc"}],"date_created":"2018-12-11T11:50:33Z","date_updated":"2021-01-12T06:48:51Z","volume":67,"scopus_import":1,"day":"01","has_accepted_license":"1","citation":{"ama":"Alwen JF, De Rezende S, Nordstrom J, Vinyals M. Cumulative space in black-white pebbling and resolution. In: Papadimitriou C, ed. Vol 67. Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik; 2017:38:1-38-21. doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2017.38","ieee":"J. F. Alwen, S. De Rezende, J. Nordstrom, and M. Vinyals, “Cumulative space in black-white pebbling and resolution,” presented at the ITCS: Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science, Berkeley, CA, United States, 2017, vol. 67, p. 38:1-38-21.","apa":"Alwen, J. F., De Rezende, S., Nordstrom, J., & Vinyals, M. (2017). Cumulative space in black-white pebbling and resolution. In C. Papadimitriou (Ed.) (Vol. 67, p. 38:1-38-21). Presented at the ITCS: Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science, Berkeley, CA, United States: Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2017.38","ista":"Alwen JF, De Rezende S, Nordstrom J, Vinyals M. 2017. Cumulative space in black-white pebbling and resolution. ITCS: Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science, LIPIcs, vol. 67, 38:1-38-21.","short":"J.F. Alwen, S. De Rezende, J. Nordstrom, M. Vinyals, in:, C. Papadimitriou (Ed.), Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2017, p. 38:1-38-21.","mla":"Alwen, Joel F., et al. Cumulative Space in Black-White Pebbling and Resolution. Edited by Christos Papadimitriou, vol. 67, Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2017, p. 38:1-38-21, doi:10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2017.38.","chicago":"Alwen, Joel F, Susanna De Rezende, Jakob Nordstrom, and Marc Vinyals. “Cumulative Space in Black-White Pebbling and Resolution.” edited by Christos Papadimitriou, 67:38:1-38-21. Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik, 2017. https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.ITCS.2017.38."},"page":"38:1-38-21","date_published":"2017-01-01T00:00:00Z","type":"conference","alternative_title":["LIPIcs"],"abstract":[{"text":"We study space complexity and time-space trade-offs with a focus not on peak memory usage but on overall memory consumption throughout the computation. Such a cumulative space measure was introduced for the computational model of parallel black pebbling by [Alwen and Serbinenko ’15] as a tool for obtaining results in cryptography. We consider instead the non- deterministic black-white pebble game and prove optimal cumulative space lower bounds and trade-offs, where in order to minimize pebbling time the space has to remain large during a significant fraction of the pebbling. We also initiate the study of cumulative space in proof complexity, an area where other space complexity measures have been extensively studied during the last 10–15 years. Using and extending the connection between proof complexity and pebble games in [Ben-Sasson and Nordström ’08, ’11] we obtain several strong cumulative space results for (even parallel versions of) the resolution proof system, and outline some possible future directions of study of this, in our opinion, natural and interesting space measure.","lang":"eng"}],"user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","_id":"1175","status":"public","ddc":["005","600"],"title":"Cumulative space in black-white pebbling and resolution","intvolume":" 67","pubrep_id":"927","file":[{"file_name":"IST-2018-927-v1+1_LIPIcs-ITCS-2017-38.pdf","access_level":"open_access","file_size":557769,"content_type":"application/pdf","creator":"system","relation":"main_file","file_id":"5263","date_updated":"2020-07-14T12:44:37Z","date_created":"2018-12-12T10:17:11Z","checksum":"dbc94810be07c2fb1945d5c2a6130e6c"}],"oa_version":"Published Version"}]