Perfect Zero-Knowledge Argument of Knowledge with Negligible Error Probability in Two-Round for NP from Any One-Way Permutation

Author(s):  
Chunming Tang ◽  
Zhifeng Hao
1997 ◽  
Vol 4 (50) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan B. Damgård ◽  
Birgit Pfitzmann

<p>We study the behavior of interactive arguments under sequential iteration, in particular how this affects the error probability. This problem turns out to be more complex than one might expect from the fact that for interactive proofs, the error trivially decreases exponentially in the number of iterations.<br />In particular, we study the typical efficient case where the iterated protocol is based on a single instance of a computational problem. This is not a special case of independent<br />iterations of an entire protocol, and real exponential decrease of the error cannot be expected, but nevertheless, for practical applications, one needs concrete relations<br />between the complexity and error probability of the underlying problem and that of the iterated protocol. We show how this problem can be formalized and solved using the<br />theory of proofs of knowledge.<br /> We also prove that in the non-uniform model of complexity the error probability<br />of independent iterations of an argument does indeed decrease exponentially - to our knowledge this is the first result about a strictly exponentially small error probability in a computational cryptographic security property. <br />As an illustration of our first result, we present a very efficient zero-knowledge argument<br />for circuit satisfiability, and thus for any NP problem, based on any collision-intractable hash function. Our theory applies to show the soundness of this protocol. Using an efficient hash function such as SHA-1, the protocol can handle about 20000 binary gates per second at an error level of 2^−50.</p><p>Keywords -- Interactive proofs, arguments, proofs of knowledge, computational security,<br />efficient general primitives, multi-bit commitment, statistical zero-knowledge.</p>


1997 ◽  
Vol 4 (27) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Cramer ◽  
Ivan B. Damgård

We present zero-knowledge proofs and arguments for arithmetic circuits over finite prime fields, namely given a circuit, show in zero-knowledge that inputs can be selected leading to a given output. For a field GF(q), where q is an n-bit prime, a<br />circuit of size O(n), and error probability 2^−n, our protocols require communication of O(n^2) bits. This is the same worst-cast complexity as the trivial (non zero-knowledge)<br />interactive proof where the prover just reveals the input values. If the circuit involves n multiplications, the best previously known methods would in general require communication<br />of  Omega(n^3 log n) bits.<br />Variations of the technique behind these protocols lead to other interesting applications.<br />We first look at the Boolean Circuit Satisfiability problem and give zero-knowledge proofs and arguments for a circuit of size n and error probability 2^−n in which there is an interactive preprocessing phase requiring communication of O(n^2)<br />bits. In this phase, the statement to be proved later need not be known. Later the prover can non-interactively prove any circuit he wants, i.e. by sending only one message, of size O(n) bits.<br />As a second application, we show that Shamirs (Shens) interactive proof system for the (IP-complete) QBF problem can be transformed to a zero-knowledge proof<br />system with the same asymptotic communication complexity and number of rounds. The security of our protocols can be based on any one-way group homomorphism with a particular set of properties. We give examples of special assumptions sufficient for this, including: the RSA assumption, hardness of discrete log in a prime order group, and polynomial security of Die-Hellman encryption. We note that the constants involved in our asymptotic complexities are small enough for our protocols to be practical with realistic choices of parameters.


2021 ◽  
pp. 281-298
Author(s):  
Yi Liu ◽  
Qi Wang ◽  
Siu-Ming Yiu

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document