A Note on Perfect Correctness by Derandomization
Author(s)
Bitansky, Nir; Vaikuntanathan, Vinod
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© International Association for Cryptologic Research 2017. We show a general compiler that transforms a large class of erroneous cryptographic schemes (such as public-key encryption, indistinguishability obfuscation, and secure multiparty computation schemes) into perfectly correct ones. The transformation works for schemes that are correct on all inputs with probability noticeably larger than half, and are secure under parallel repetition. We assume the existence of one-way functions and of functions with deterministic (uniform) time complexity 2O(n) and non-deterministic circuit complexity 2Ω(n). Our transformation complements previous results that showed how public-key encryption and indistinguishability obfuscation that err on a noticeable fraction of inputs can be turned into ones that for all inputs are often correct. The technique relies on the idea of “reverse randomization” (Naor, Crypto 1989) and on Nisan-Wigderson style derandomization, previously used in cryptography to remove interaction from witnessindistinguishable proofs and commitment schemes (Barak, Ong and Vadhan, Crypto 2003).
Date issued
2017Department
Sloan School of ManagementPublisher
Springer International Publishing
Citation
Bitansky, Nir and Vaikuntanathan, Vinod. 2017. "A Note on Perfect Correctness by Derandomization."
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0302-9743
1611-3349