Adaptively Secure Coin-Flipping, Revisited

被引:15
|
作者
Goldwasser, Shafi [1 ,3 ]
Kalai, Yael Tauman [2 ]
Park, Sunoo [3 ]
机构
[1] Weizmann Inst Sci, IL-76100 Rehovot, Israel
[2] Microsoft Res, Cambridge, MA USA
[3] MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1007/978-3-662-47666-6_53
中图分类号
TP3 [计算技术、计算机技术];
学科分类号
0812 ;
摘要
The question of how much bias a coalition of faulty players can introduce into distributed sampling protocols in the full information model was first studied by Ben-Or and Linial in 1985. They focused on the problem of collective coin-flipping, in which a set of n players wish to use their private randomness to generate a common random bit b in the presence of t(n) faulty players, such that the probability that b = 0 (and 1) are at least e for some constant epsilon > 0. They showed that the majority function can tolerate t = theta(root n) corruptions even in the presence of adaptive adversaries and conjectured that this is optimal in the adaptive setting. Shortly thereafter, Lichtenstein, Linial, and Saks proved that the conjecture holds for protocols where each player sends a single bit. Their result has been the main progress on the conjecture for the last 30 years. In this work we revisit this question, and ask: what about protocols where players can send longer messages? Can increased communication enable tolerance of a larger fraction of corrupt players? We introduce a model of strong adaptive corruptions, in which an adversary sees all messages sent by honest parties in any given round, and based on the message content, decides whether to corrupt a party (and alter its message) or not. This is in contrast to the (classical) adaptive adversary, who corrupts parties based on prior communication history, and cannot alter messages already sent. Such strongly adaptive corruptions seem to be a realistic concern in settings where malicious parties can alter (or sabotage the delivery) of honest messages depending on their content, yet existing adversarial models do not take this into account. We prove that any one-round coin-flipping protocol, regardless of message length, can be secure against at most (O) over tilde(root n) strong adaptive corruptions. Thus, increased message length does not help in this setting. We then shed light on the connection between adaptive and strongly adaptive adversaries, by proving that for any symmetric one-round coinflipping protocol secure against t adaptive corruptions, there is a symmetric one-round coin-flipping protocol secure against t strongly adaptive corruptions. Going back to the standard adaptive model, we can now prove that any symmetric one-round protocol with arbitrarily long messages can tolerate at most (O) over tilde(root n) adaptive corruptions. At the heart of our results there is a new technique for converting any one-round secure protocol with arbitrarily long messages into a secure one where each player sends only polylog(n) bits. This technique may be of independent interest.
引用
收藏
页码:663 / 674
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] New imperfect random source with applications to coin-flipping
    Dodis, Y
    AUTOMATA LANGUAGES AND PROGRAMMING, PROCEEDING, 2001, 2076 : 297 - 309
  • [12] Least-Squares Prices of Coin-Flipping Games
    Hirashita, Yukio
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED MATHEMATICS & STATISTICS, 2008, 13 (D08): : 3 - 8
  • [13] Large family of quantum weak coin-flipping protocols
    Mochon, C
    PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2005, 72 (02):
  • [14] Family of loss-tolerant quantum coin-flipping protocols
    Aharon, N.
    Massar, S.
    Silman, J.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 2010, 82 (05):
  • [15] A search for quantum coin-flipping protocols using optimization techniques
    Ashwin Nayak
    Jamie Sikora
    Levent Tunçel
    Mathematical Programming, 2016, 156 : 581 - 613
  • [16] ON THE EVOLUTION OF COIN-FLIPPING PLASTICITY - A RESPONSE TO MCGINLEY, TEMME, AND GEBER
    KAPLAN, RH
    COOPER, WS
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1988, 132 (05): : 753 - 755
  • [17] A search for quantum coin-flipping protocols using optimization techniques
    Nayak, Ashwin
    Sikora, Jamie
    Tuncel, Levent
    MATHEMATICAL PROGRAMMING, 2016, 156 (1-2) : 581 - 613
  • [18] Timothy Williamson's Coin-Flipping Argument: Refuted Prior to Publication?
    Howson, Colin
    ERKENNTNIS, 2021, 86 (03) : 575 - 583
  • [19] COIN-FLIPPING GAMES IMMUNE AGAINST LINEAR-SIZED COALITIONS
    ALON, N
    NAOR, M
    SIAM JOURNAL ON COMPUTING, 1993, 22 (02) : 403 - 417
  • [20] Timothy Williamson’s Coin-Flipping Argument: Refuted Prior to Publication?
    Colin Howson
    Erkenntnis, 2021, 86 : 575 - 583