Introducing a Framework to Enable Anonymous Secure Multi-Party Computation in Practice

11/03/2021
by   Malte Breuer, et al.
0

Secure Multi-Party Computation (SMPC) allows a set of parties to securely compute a functionality in a distributed fashion without the need for any trusted external party. Usually, it is assumed that the parties know each other and have already established authenticated channels among each other. However, in practice the parties sometimes must stay anonymous. In this paper, we conceptualize a framework that enables the repeated execution of an SMPC protocol for a given functionality such that the parties can keep their participation in the protocol executions private and at the same time be sure that only authorized parties may take part in a protocol execution. We identify the security properties that an implementation of our framework must meet and introduce a first implementation of the framework that achieves these properties.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
06/13/2022

Constant-Round Linear-Broadcast Secure Computation with Penalties

It is known that Bitcoin enables achieving fairness in secure computatio...
research
09/22/2018

On the Security of an Unconditionally Secure, Universally Composable Inner Product Protocol

In this paper we discuss the security of a distributed inner product (DI...
research
11/26/2018

Distributed and Secure ML with Self-tallying Multi-party Aggregation

Privacy preserving multi-party computation has many applications in area...
research
07/23/2020

Formalizing Nakamoto-Style Proof of Stake

Fault-tolerant distributed systems move the trust in a single party to a...
research
02/26/2021

Secure Evaluation of Knowledge Graph Merging Gain

Finding out the differences and commonalities between the knowledge of t...
research
05/03/2019

A Hybrid Approach to Secure Function Evaluation Using SGX

A protocol for two-party secure function evaluation (2P-SFE) aims to all...
research
10/23/2018

SATE: Robust and Private Allegation Escrows

For fear of retribution, the victim of a crime may be willing to report ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset