IACR News item: 03 August 2025
Yalan Wang, Liqun Chen, Yangguang Tian, Long Meng, Christopher J.P. Newton
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has established standards for decentralized identities (DIDs) and verifiable credentials (VCs). A DID serves as a unique identifier for an entity, while a VC validates specific attributes associated with the DID holder. To prove ownership of credentials, users generate verifiable presentations (VPs). To enhance privacy, the W3C standards advocate for randomizable signatures in VC creation and zero-knowledge proofs for VP generation. However, these standards face a significant limitation: they cannot effectively verify cross-domain credentials while maintaining anonymity. In this paper, we present Anonymous Verifiable Presentations with Extended Usability (AVPEU), a novel framework that addresses this limitation through the introduction of a notary system. At the technical core of AVPEU lies our proposed randomizable message-hiding signature scheme. We provide both a generic construction of AVPEU and specific implementations based on Boneh-Boyen-Shacham (BBS), Camenisch-Lysyanskaya (CL), and Pointcheval-Sanders (PS) signature. Our experimental results demonstrate the feasibility of these schemes.
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