International Association for Cryptologic Research

International Association
for Cryptologic Research

IACR News item: 25 November 2012

Sungwook Kim, Jung Hee Cheon
ePrint Report ePrint Report
Let $E$ be an elliptic curve over a finite field ${\\mathbb F}_q$ with a power of prime $q$, $r$ a prime dividing $\\#E({\\mathbb F}_q)$, and $k$ the smallest positive integer satisfying $r | \\Phi_k(p)$, called embedding degree. Then a bilinear map $t: E({\\mathbb F}_q)[r] \\times E({\\mathbb F}_{q^k})/rE({\\mathbb F}_{q^k}) \\rightarrow {\\mathbb F}_{q^k}^*$ is defined, called the Tate pairing. And the Ate pairing and other variants are obtained by reducing the domain for each argument and raising it to some power.

In this paper we consider the {\\em Fixed Argument Pairing Inversion (FAPI)} problem for the Tate pairing and its variants. In 2012, considering FAPI for the Ate$_i$ pairing, Kanayama and Okamoto formulated the {\\em Exponentiation Inversion (EI)} problem. However the definition gives a somewhat vague description of the hardness of EI. We point out that the described EI can be easily solved, and hence clarify the description so that the problem does contain the actual hardness connection with the prescribed domain for given pairings.

Next we show that inverting the Ate pairing (including other variants of the Tate pairing) defined on the smaller domain is neither easier nor harder than inverting the Tate pairing defined on the lager domain. This is very interesting because it is commonly believed that the structure of the Ate pairing is so simple and good (that is, the Miller length is short, the solution domain is small and has an algebraic structure induced from the Frobenius map) that it may leak some information, thus there would be a chance for attackers to find further approach to solve FAPI for the Ate pairing, differently from the Tate pairing.

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