International Association for Cryptologic Research

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16 August 2021

InfoSec Global
Job Posting Job Posting
InfoSec Global is a company that works on creating Cryptographic Lifecycle Management. This includes Crypto Analytics Tools, adaptation our Crypto Agility Platform, preparing for and migrating to Post-Quantum Cryptography, implementing Cryptographic Libraries. We work on innovative cryptography and crypto management tools, bringing them to life and moving it from static to dynamic. For more information, please visit our website infosecglobal.com We are looking to hire a Cryptographic Engineer to our core cryptographic team, whose work will be focused around our innovative product AgileSec platform and cryptographic development in general. As a Cryptographic Engineer in our team, your responsibilities will include: • Working on cryptographic SDKs • Working on cryptographic library implementation • Deriving and encoding cryptographic policies • Crypto Automation • Implementing cryptographic algorithms Required Qualifications: • Bachelor’s or Master’s degree • Experience working with Git • Experience working with SDKs • Knowledge of C and other programming languages • Extensive software development experience Preferred Qualifications: • Knowledge and experience working with cryptographic engines • Knowledge and experience working with TLS stack • Ability to write clear technical documentation This is a full-time role at the Toronto (HQ) office. Currently, the work would be performed remotely for the time being. The employee will be eligible for health benefits after the probation period. Also, the employee should have a Canadian PR or Citizenship status.

Closing date for applications:

Contact: Vladimir Soukharev

More information: https://www.infosecglobal.com/

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University of Wuppertal, Germany
Job Posting Job Posting
We are looking for a Ph.D. student or postdoc in cryptography, for research projects on public key encryption with enhanced functionality and secure outsourced storage.

For more information about our research group, see https://itsc.uni-wuppertal.de/en/

Prerequisites for a Ph.D. candidate:
  • M.Sc. or similar degree in computer science
  • Strong background in cryptography and theoretical computer science
Prerequisites for a postdoc position: Ph.D. in public key cryptography or a closely related area

The official job announcement can be found at https://stellenausschreibungen.uni-wuppertal.de/ (unfortunately in German only). This announcement is in German only. However, German language skills are not required, the working language in the group is English.

If you have questions, please contact Tibor Jager by e-mail.

Closing date for applications:

Contact: Tibor Jager, see group web page for e-mail address.

More information: https://itsc.uni-wuppertal.de/en/

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Lior Goldberg, Shahar Papini, Michael Riabzev
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Proof systems allow one party to prove to another party that a certain statement is true. Most existing practical proof systems require that the statement will be represented in terms of polynomial equations over a finite field. This makes the process of representing a statement that one wishes to prove or verify rather complicated, as this process requires a new set of equations for each statement. Various approaches to deal with this problem have been proposed. We present Cairo, a practically-efficient Turing-complete STARK-friendly CPU architecture. We describe a single set of polynomial equations for the statement that the execution of a program on this architecture is valid. Given a statement one wishes to prove, Cairo allows writing a program that describes that statement, instead of writing a set of polynomial equations.
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Yingyin Pan, Jianghua Zhong, Dongdai Lin
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Nonlinear feedback shift registers (NFSRs) are used in many stream ciphers as their main building blocks. In particular, Galois NFSRs with terminal bits are used in the typical stream ciphers Grain and Trivium. One security criterion for the design of stream ciphers is to assure their used NFSRs are nonsingular. The nonsingularity is well solved for Fibonacci NFSRs, whereas it is not for Galois NFSRs. In addition, some types of Galois NFSRs equivalent to Fibonacci ones have been found. However, there exist new types of such Galois NFSRs remains unknown. The paper first considers the nonsingularity of Galois NFSRs. Some necessary/sufficient conditions are presented. The paper then concentrates on the equivalence between Galois NFSRs and Fibonacci ones. Some necessary conditions for Galois NFSRs equivalent to Fibonacci ones are provided. The Galois NFSRs with terminal bits equivalent to a given Fibonacci one are enumerated. Moreover, two classes of nonsingular Galois NFSRs with terminal bits are found to be the new types of Galois NFSRs equivalent to Fibonacci ones.
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Pavel Atnashev, George Woltman
ePrint Report ePrint Report
This paper introduces fast algorithms for performing group operations on Edwards curves using FFT-based multiplication. Previously known algorithms can use such multiplication too, but better results can be achieved if particular properties of FFT-based arithmetic are accounted for. The introduced algorithms perform operations in extended Edwards coordinates and in Montgomery single coordinate.
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Hadrien Barral, Éric Brier, Rémi Géraud-Stewart, Arthur Léonard, David Naccache, Quentin Vermande, Samuel Vivien
ePrint Report ePrint Report
We report the discovery of new results relating $L$-functions, which typically encode interesting information about mathematical objects, obtained in a \emph{semi-automated} fashion using an algebraic sieving technique.

Algebraic sieving initially comes from cryptanalysis, where it is used to solve factorization, discrete logarithms, or to produce signature forgeries in cryptosystems such as RSA. We repurpose the technique here to provide candidate identities, which can be tested and ultimately formally proven.

A limitation of our technique is the need for human intervention in the post-processing phase, to determine the most general form of conjectured identities, and to provide a proof for them. Nevertheless we report 29 identities that hitherto never appeared in the literature, 9 of which we could completely prove, the remainder being numerically valid over all tested values.

This work complements other instances in the literature where this type of automated symbolic computation has served as a productive step toward theorem proving; it can be extremely helpful in figuring out what it is that one should attempt to prove.
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Sabyasachi Dey, Chandan Dey, Santanu Sarkar, Willi Meier
ePrint Report ePrint Report
ChaCha has been one of the prominent ARX designs of the last few years because of its use in several systems. The cryptanalysis of ChaCha involves a differential attack which exploits the idea of Probabilistic Neutral Bits (PNBs). For a long period, the single-bit distinguisher in this differential attack was found up to 3 rounds. At Crypto $2020$, Beierle et. al. introduced for the first time single bit distinguishers for $3.5$ rounds, which contributed significantly in regaining the flow of research work in this direction. This discovery became the primary factor behind the huge improvement in the key recovery attack complexity in that work. This was followed by another work at Eurocrypt 2021, where a single bit distinguisher of $3.5$-th round helped to produce a 7-round distinguisher of ChaCha and a further improvement in key recovery.

In the first part of this paper, we provide the theoretical framework for the distinguisher given by Beierle et. al. We mathematically derive the observed differential correlation for the particular position where the output difference is observed at $3.5$ rounds. Also, Beierle et. al. mentioned the issue of the availability of proper IVs to produce such distinguishers, and pointed out that not all keys have such IVs available. Here we provide a theoretical insight of this issue.

Next we revisit the work of Coutinho et. al. (Eurocrypt 2021). Using Differential-Linear attacks against ChaCha, they claimed distinguisher and key recovery with complexities $2^{218}$ and $2^{228.51}$ respectively. We show that the differential correlation for $3.5$ rounds is much smaller than the claim of Coutinho et. al. This makes the attack complexities much higher than their claim.
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Hyunji Kim, Gyeongju Song, Kyoungbae Jang, Hwajeong Seo
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Recently, artificial intelligence-based cryptanalysis techniques have been researched. In this paper, we find the key of the Caesar cipher, which is a classical cipher, by using a quantum machine learning algorithm that learns by parameterized quantum circuit instead of a classical neural network. In the case of 4-bit plaintext and key, results could not be obtained due to the limitations of the cloud environment. But in the case of 2-bit plaintext and key, an accuracy of 1.0 was achieved, and in the case of 3-bit plaintext and key, an accuracy of 0.84 was achieved. In addition, as a result of cryptanalysis for a 2-bit dataset on IBM's real quantum processor, a classification accuracy of 0.93 was achieved. In the future, we will research a qubit reduction method for cryptanalysis of longer-length plaintext and key, and a technique for maintaining accuracy in real quantum hardware.
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Chun-I Fan, Cheng-Han Shie, Yi-Fan Tseng, Hui-Chun Huang
ePrint Report ePrint Report
As Internet of Things (IoT) thriving over the whole world, more and more IoT devices and IoT-based protocols have been designed and proposed in order to meet people's needs. Among those protocols, message queueing telemetry transport (MQTT) is one of the most emerging and promising protocol, which provides many-to-many message transmission based on the ``publish/subscribe'' mechanism. It has been widely used in industries such as the energy industry, chemical engineering, self-driving, etc. While transporting important messages, MQTT specification recommends the use of TLS protocol. However, computation cost of TLS is too heavy. Since topics in a broker are stored with a hierarchical structure, In this manuscript, we propose a novel data protection protocol for MQTT from hierarchical ID-based encryption. Our protocol adopts the intrinsic hierarchical structures of MQTT, and achieves constant-size keys, i.e. independent of the depth in hierarchical structures.
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Chun-I Fan, Si-Jing Wu, Yi-Fan Tseng
ePrint Report ePrint Report
With the rapid advancement of cloud computing, users upload their files to the cloud server so that any user can access it remotely. To assure the data security, the data owner, typically, encrypts the data before outsourcing them to the cloud server. In addition, an encryption mechanism needs to enable the consumers to perform efficient searches of such encrypted data in the cloud storages through keywords, i.e. searchable encryption. However, most of searchable encryption is improper due to several limitations, such as the requirement of an on-line fully trusted third party, poor efficiency, high-overhead in user revocation, support of a single keyword search, etc. To mitigate such limitations, an attribute-based encryption scheme with fine-grained multi-keyword search is proposed. The new scheme supports the user revocation. In addition, the length of the ciphertext as well as the secret key do not grow linearly under the influence of the size of attribute set. The performance of the proposed scheme is better as compared to other related schemes. Hence, one can easily adopt the proposed scheme for the real life applications due to its flexibility in terms of its features, security and efficiency.
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François Garillot, Yashvanth Kondi, Payman Mohassel, Valeria Nikolaenko
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Schnorr's signature scheme permits an elegant threshold signing protocol due to its linear signing equation. However each new signature consumes fresh randomness, which can be a major attack vector in practice. Sources of randomness in deployments are frequently either unreliable, or require state continuity, i.e. reliable fresh state resilient to rollbacks. State continuity is a notoriously difficult guarantee to achieve in practice, due to system crashes caused by software errors, malicious actors, or power supply interruptions (Parno et al., S&P '11). This is a non-issue for Schnorr variants such as EdDSA, which is specified to derive nonces deterministically as a function of the message and the secret key. However, it is challenging to translate these benefits to the threshold setting, specifically to construct a threshold Schnorr scheme where signing neither requires parties to consume fresh randomness nor update long-term secret state.

In this work, we construct a dishonest majority threshold Schnorr protocol that enables such stateless deterministic nonce derivation using standardized block ciphers. Our core technical ingredients are new tools for the zero-knowledge from garbled circuits (ZKGC) paradigm to aid in verifying correct nonce derivation: - A mechanism based on UC Commitments that allows a prover to commit once to a witness, and prove an unbounded number of statements online with only cheap symmetric key operations. - A garbling gadget to translate intermediate garbled circuit wire labels to arithmetic encodings.

Our scheme prioritizes computation cost, with each proof requiring only a small constant number of exponentiations.
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Alessandra Scafuro, Bihan Zhang
ePrint Report ePrint Report
A ring signature allows a party to sign messages anonymously on behalf of a group, which is called ring. Traceable ring signatures are a variant of ring signatures that limits the anonymity guarantees, enforcing that a member can sign anonymously at most one message per tag. Namely, if a party signs two different messages for the same tag, it will be de-anomymized. This property is very useful in decentralized platforms to allow members to anonymously endorse statements in a controlled manner. In this work we introduce one-time traceable ring signatures, where a member can sign anonymously only one message. This natural variant suffices in many applications for which traceable ring signatures are useful, and enables us to design a scheme that only requires a few hash evaluations and outperforms existing (non one-time) schemes.

Our one-time traceable ring signature scheme presents many advantages: it is fast, with a signing time of less than 1 second for a ring of $2^{10}$ signers (and much less for smaller rings); it is {\em post-quantum resistant}, as it only requires hash evaluations; it is extremely simple, as it requires only a black-box access to a generic hash function (modeled as a random oracle) and no other cryptographic operation is involved. From a theoretical standpoint our scheme is also the first anonymous signature scheme based on a black-box access to a symmetric-key primitive. All existing anonymous signatures are either based on specific hardness assumptions (e.g., LWE, SIS, etc.) or use the underlying symmetric-key primitive in a non-black-box way, i.e., they leverage the circuit representation of the primitive.
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Thinh H. Pham, Ben Marshall, Alexander Fell, Siew-Kei Lam, Daniel Page
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Side-channel analysis (SCA) attacks pose a major threat to embedded systems due to their ease of accessibility. Realising SCA resilient cryptographic algorithms on embedded systems under tight intrinsic constraints, such as low area cost, limited computational ability, etc., is extremely challenging and often not possible. We propose a seamless and effective approach to realise a generic countermeasure against SCA attacks. XDIVINSA, an extended diversifying instruction agent, is introduced to realise the countermeasure at the microarchitecture level based on the combining concept of diversified instruction set extension (ISE) and hardware diversification. XDIVINSA is developed as a lightweight co-processor that is tightly coupled with a RISC-V processor. The proposed method can be applied to various algorithms without the need for software developers to undertake substantial design efforts hardening their implementations against SCA. XDIVINSA has been implemented on the SASEBO G-III board which hosts a Kintex-7 XC7K160T FPGA device for SCA mitigation evaluation. Experimental results based on non-specific t-statistic tests show that our solution can achieve leakage mitigation on the power side channel of different cryptographic kernels, i.e., Speck, ChaCha20, AES, and RSA with an acceptable performance overhead compared to existing countermeasures.
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Oleksandra Lapiha
ePrint Report ePrint Report
In this report we analyse and compare the complexity of solving the Bounded Distance Decoding problem in two families for discrete logarithm lattices. Our algorithm uses the internal structure of the lattice to decode an error close to Minkowski’s bound efficiently. This procedure can be used as a decryption algorithm of an encryption scheme, where the internal structure of the lattice serves as a secret key. In addition, one of these lattices was used in [1] to construct a family of one way functions. We present cryptanalysis of the mentioned scheme and we prove that the stated size of the keys is insufficient for a required security level.
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Wissam Ghantous, Federico Pintore, Mattia Veroni
ePrint Report ePrint Report
The digital signatures that have been proposed so far in the setting of the Supersingular Isogeny Diffie-Hellman scheme (SIDH) were obtained by applying the Fiat-Shamir transform - and a quantum-resistant analogous, the Unruh transform - to an interactive identification protocol introduced by De Feo, Jao and Pl$\hat{\mbox{u}}$t. The security of the resulting schemes is therefore deduced from that of the base identification protocol. In this paper, we revisit the proofs that have appeared in the literature for the special soundness property of the above mentioned SIDH-based identification protocol. All such proofs consider the same extraction algorithm, which is claimed to always extract a valid witness for a statement $\statement$ when given two valid transcripts, with the same commitment and different challenges, relative to $\statement$ itself. We show that this is not always the case, with some explicit counterexamples. The general argument fails due to some special cycles in supersingular isogeny graphs. The existence of these special cycles not only enjoys a theoretical interest, but is generally relevant for the Isogeny-based Cryptography. We provide some theoretical results on their presence in supersingular isogeny graphs, and discuss the relevance of the obtained results for some known cryptographic applications.
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Sara Ricci, Petr Dzurenda, Jan Hajny, Lukas Malina
ePrint Report ePrint Report
In the last decades, several signcryption schemes have been proposed for different privacy-enhancing purposes. In this paper, we propose a new privacy-enhancing group signcryption scheme that provides: unforgeability, confidentiality, ciphertext and sender anonymity, traceability, unlinkability, exculpability, coalition-resistance, and unforgeable tracing verification. It is important to notice that the proposed scheme allows a signer to anonymously signcryt a message on the group's behalf (i.e., sender's anonymity). Security analysis of the scheme is also provided. Our proposal is proven to be strongly existentially unforgeable under an adaptive chosen message attack, indistinguishable under an adaptive chosen ciphertext attack, and to provide ciphertext anonymity under an adaptive chosen ciphertext attack. Furthermore, the scheme is extended to work in a multi-receiver scenario, where an authorized group of receivers is able to unsigncrypt the ciphertext. The experimental results show that our scheme is efficient even on computationally restricted devices and can be therefore used in many IoT applications. Signcrypt protocol on smart cards takes less than 1~s (including communication overhead). The time of Unsigncrypt protocol on current ARM devices is negligible (less than 40 ms).
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Marina Blanton, Chen Yuan
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Binary search is one of the most popular algorithms in computer science. Realizing it in the context of secure multiparty computation which demands data-oblivious execution, however, is extremely non-trivial. It has been previously implemented only using oblivious RAM (ORAM) for secure computation and in this work we initiate the study of this topic using conventional secure computation techniques based on secret sharing. We develop a suite of protocols with different properties and of different structure for searching a private dataset of $m$ elements by a private numeric key. Our protocols result in $O(m)$ and $O(\sqrt{m})$ communication using only standard and readily available operations based on secret sharing. We further extend our protocols to support write operations, namely, binary search that obliviously updates the selected element, and realize two variants: updating non-key fields and updating the key field. Our implementation results indicate that even after applying known and our own optimizations to the fastest ORAM constructions, our solutions are faster than optimized ORAM schemes for datasets of up to $2^{30}$ elements and by up to two orders of magnitude. We hope that this work will prompt further interest in seeking efficient realizations of this important problem.
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Irakliy Khaburzaniya, Konstantinos Chalkias, Kevin Lewi, Harjasleen Malvai
ePrint Report ePrint Report
This work presents an approach for compressing regular hash-based signatures using STARKs (Ben-Sasson et. al.'18). We focus on constructing a hash-based t-of-n threshold signature scheme, as well as an aggregate signature scheme. In both constructions, an aggregator collects individual one-time hash-based signatures and outputs a STARK proof attesting that the signatures are valid and meet the required thresholds. This proof then serves the role of the aggregate or threshold signature. We demonstrate the concrete performance of such constructions, having implemented the algebraic intermediate representations (AIR) for them, along with an experimental evaluation over our implementation of the STARK protocol.

We find that, even when we aggregate thousands of signatures, the final aggregated size ranges between 100KB and 200KB, making our schemes attractive when there exist at least 50 one-or-few-times hash-based signatures. We also observe that for STARK-based signature aggregation, the size of individual signatures is less important than the number of hash invocations and the complexity of the signature verification algorithm. This implies that simple hash-based signature variants (e.g. Lamport, HORST, BPQS) are well-suited for aggregation, as their large individual signatures serve only as witnesses to the ZKP circuit and are not needed for aggregate signature verification.

Our constructions are directly applicable as scalable solutions for post-quantum secure blockchains which typically employ blocks of hundreds or thousands of signed transactions. Moreover, stateful hash-based one-or-few-times signatures are already used in some PQ-ready blockchains, as address reuse is typically discouraged for privacy reasons.
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Zhen Shi, Chenhui Jin, Jiyan Zhang, Ting Cui, Lin Ding
ePrint Report ePrint Report
In this paper, a method for searching correlations between the binary stream of LFSR and the keystream of SNOW-V and SNOW-Vi is presented based on the techniques of composite function. With the aid of the linear relationship between the four taps of LFSR inputting to FSM at three consecutive clocks, we present an automatic search model based on the SAT/SMT technique and search out a binary linear approximation with a correlation 2^{-49.54}. Applying such approximation, we provide a correlation attack on SNOW-V with an expected time complexity 2^{248.81}, a memory complexity 2^{240} and 2^{240} keystream words generated by the same key and IV. For SNOW-Vi, we provide a binary linear approximation with the same correlation and mount a correlation attack with the same complexity as that of SNOW-V. The results indicate that neither of SNOW-V and SNOW-Vi can guarantee the 256-bit security level if the design constraint that the maximum of keystream length for a single pair of key and IV is less than 2^{64} is ignored.
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Yasufumi Hashimoto
ePrint Report ePrint Report
At PQCrypto 2021, Smith-Tone proposed a new modifier, called ``Q'', to construct a fast multivariate signature scheme from a known scheme. In the present paper, we propose an idea to weaken the security of this modifier.
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