International Association for Cryptologic Research

International Association
for Cryptologic Research

IACR News item: 03 August 2015

Sandro Coretti, Yevgeniy Dodis, Björn Tackmann, Daniele Venturi
ePrint Report ePrint Report
In a seminal paper, Dolev et al. (STOC\'91) introduced the notion of non-malleable encryption (NM-CPA). This notion is very intriguing since it suffices for many applications of chosen-ciphertext secure encryption (IND-CCA), and, yet, can be generically built from semantically secure (IND-CPA) encryption, as was shown in another seminal paper of Choi et al. (TCC\'08). In this paper we investigate three questions related to NM-CPA security:

- Can the rate of the construction by Choi et al. of NM-CPA from IND-CPA be improved?

- Is it possible to achieve multi-bit NM-CPA security more efficiently from a single-bit NM-CPA scheme than from IND-CPA?

- Is there a notion stronger than NM-CPA that has natural applications and can be achieved from IND-CPA security?

We answer all three questions in the positive. First, we improve the rate in the construction of Choi et al. by a factor O(k), where k is the security parameter. Still, encrypting a message of size O(k) would require ciphertext and keys of size O(k^2) times that of the IND-CPA scheme, even in our improved scheme. Therefore, we show a more efficient domain extension technique for building a k-bit NM-CPA scheme from a single-bit NM-CPA scheme with keys and ciphertext of size O(k) times that of the NM-CPA one-bit scheme. To achieve our goal, we define and construct a novel type of continuous non-malleable code (NMC), called secret-state NMC, as we show that standard continuous NMCs are not enough for the natural \"encode-then-encrypt-bit-by-bit\" approach to work.

Finally, we introduce a new security notion for public-key encryption (PKE) that we dub non-malleability under (chosen-ciphertext) self-destruct attacks (NM-SDA). After showing that NM-SDA is a strict strengthening of NM-CPA and allows for more applications, we nevertheless show that both of our results---(faster) construction from IND-CPA and domain extension from one-bit scheme---also hold for our stronger NM-SDA security. In particular, the notions of IND-CPA, NM-CPA, and NM-SDA security are all equivalent, lying (plausibly, strictly?) below IND-CCA security.

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