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research article

Efficient protocols for oblivious linear function evaluation from ring-LWE

Baum, Carsten
•
Escudero, Daniel
•
Pedrouzo-Ulloa, Alberto
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January 1, 2022
Journal Of Computer Security

An oblivious linear function evaluation protocol, or OLE, is a two-party protocol for the function f (x) = ax + b, where a sender inputs the field elements a, b, and a receiver inputs x and learns f (x). OLE can be used to build secret-shared multiplication, and is an essential component of many secure computation applications including general-purpose multi-party computation, private set intersection and more.

In this work, we present several efficient OLE protocols from the ring learning with errors (RLWE) assumption. Technically, we build two new passively secure protocols, which build upon recent advances in homomorphic secret sharing from (R)LWE (Boyle et al. in: EUROCRYPT 2019, Part II (2019) 3-33 Springer), with optimizations tailored to the setting of OLE. We upgrade these to active security using efficient amortized zero-knowledge techniques for lattice relations (Baum et al. in: CRYPTO 2018, Part II (2018) 669-699 Springer), and design new variants of zero-knowledge arguments that are necessary for some of our constructions.

Our protocols offer several advantages over existing constructions. Firstly, they have the lowest communication complexity amongst previous, practical protocols from RLWE and other assumptions; secondly, they are conceptually very simple, and have just one round of interaction for the case of OLE where b is randomly chosen. We demonstrate this with an implementation of one of our passively secure protocols, which can perform more than 1 million OLEs per second over the ring Z(m), for a 120-bit modulus m, on standard hardware.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.3233/JCS-200116
Web of Science ID

WOS:000747048400003

Author(s)
Baum, Carsten
Escudero, Daniel
Pedrouzo-Ulloa, Alberto
Scholl, Peter
Troncoso-Pastoriza, Juan Ramon  
Date Issued

2022-01-01

Publisher

IOS PRESS

Published in
Journal Of Computer Security
Volume

30

Issue

1

Start page

39

End page

78

Subjects

Computer Science, Information Systems

•

Computer Science

•

oblivious linear evaluation

•

two-party computation

•

cryptographic protocols

•

ring learning with errors

•

zero-knowledge arguments

•

computation

•

encryption

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LDS  
Available on Infoscience
February 28, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/185848
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