IACR News
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04 December 2025
Zhongming Wang, Tao Xiang, Xiaoguo Li, Guomin Yang, Biwen Chen, Ze Jiang, Jiacheng Wang, Chuan Ma, Robert H. Deng
In this paper, we propose an abuse-resistant source tracing scheme that distributes traceability across distinct real-world entities. Specifically, we formally define its syntax and prove its security properties. Our scheme realizes two essential principles: minimal trust, which ensures that traceability cannot be abused as long as a single participant involved in tracing is honest, even if all others collude; and minimal information disclosure, which prevents participants from acquiring any information (e.g., communication parties' identities) unnecessary for tracing. We implemented our scheme using techniques deployed by Signal, and our evaluation shows it offers comparable performance to state-of-the-art schemes that are vulnerable to abuse.
Simon Gerhalter, Samir Hodžić, Marcel Medwed, Marcel Nageler, Artur Folwarczny, Ventzi Nikov, Jan Hoogerbrugge, Tobias Schneider, Gary McConville, Maria Eichlseder
Jiayun Yan, Yu Li, Jie Chen, Haifeng Qian, Xiaofeng Chen, Debiao He
Yanyi Liu, Rafael Pass
Our proof relies on language compression schemes of Goldberg-Sipser (STOC'85); using the same technique, we also present the the first worst-case to average-case reduction for the \emph{exact} $\KpolyA$ problem (under the same standard derandomization assumption), improving upon Hirahara's celebrated results (STOC'18, STOC'21) that only applied to a \emph{gap} version of the $\KpolyA$ problem, referred to as $\GapKpolyA$, where the goal is to decide whether $K^t(x) \leq n-O(\log n))$ or $K^{\poly(t)}(x) \geq n-1$ and under the same derandomization assumption.
Suraj Mandal, Prasanna Ravi, M Dhilipkumar, Debapriya Basu Roy, Anupam Chattopadhyay
03 December 2025
Ottawa, Canada, 24 August - 28 August 2026
Submission deadline: 11 May 2026
Notification: 25 June 2026
Ottawa, Canada, 24 August - 28 August 2026
Submission deadline: 2 February 2026
Notification: 19 March 2026
Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
1. FHE Private Computation and zk-SNARKs: to devise practical cryptographic tools for securing FHE-based private cloud computation applications, including theory and application of zk-SNARKs,
2. Design of practical Post-Quantum Symmetric-key-based digital signatures (including Legendre PRF based) with privacy enhanced properties using MPC and SNARK techniques,
3. Design of practical lattice-based cryptographic protocols,
4. Secure and efficient implementation of lattice-based cryptography.
Students will have the opportunity to work in an excellent research environment. Monash University is among the leading universities in Australia and is located in Melbourne, ranked as Australia's most liveable city and among the most liveable cities in the world.
Applicants should have (or expected to complete in the next 12 months) a Masters or Honours equivalent qualification with a research thesis, with excellent grades in mathematics, theoretical computer science, cryptography, or closely related areas. They should have excellent English verbal and written communication skills. Programming experience and skills, especially in Sagemath/python/Magma and/or C/C++, are also highly desirable.
To apply: please fill in the following form - applicants will be assessed as they are received:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSetFZLvDNug5SzzE-iH97P9TGzFGkZB-ly_EBGOrAYe3zUYBw/viewform?usp=sf_link
Closing date for applications:
Contact: Ron Steinfeld
More information: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSetFZLvDNug5SzzE-iH97P9TGzFGkZB-ly_EBGOrAYe3zUYBw/viewform?usp=sf_link
02 December 2025
Koki Jimbo
Isaac M Hair, Amit Sahai
Laila El Aimani
We consider two models for random polynomials $x$ and $y$: (1) the uniform slice case with fixed weights $w_x,w_y$, and (2) the binomial case where their coefficients are independent Bernoulli variables with success probabilities $p_x$ and $p_y$ respectively.
Our work finds a direct application in the accurate analysis of the decryption failure rate for the HQC code-based encryption scheme. The original construction relied on heuristic arguments supported by experimental data. Later, Kawachi provided a formally proven security bound, albeit a much weaker one than the heuristic estimate in the original construction. A fundamental limitation of both analyses is their restriction to the binomial case, a simplification that compromises the resulting security guarantees. Our analysis provides the first precise computation of the expectation and variance of weight($x\cdot y$) across both the uniform slice and binomial models. The results confirm the soundness of the HQC security guarantees and allow for a more informed choice of the scheme parameters that optimizes the trade-off security and efficiency.
Joël Alwen, Xiaohui Ding, Sanjam Garg, Yiannis Tselekounis
We present efficient PCSM constructions for arbitrary policy classes, as well as for hash-based ones, achieving various levels of security, while maintaining the core security properties of the underlying E2EE layer. For hash-based PCSM, we encapsulate Apple’s recent PSI protocol used in their content moderation system, and we properly adapt it to realize the desired PCSM functionality, and analyze the resulting protocol’s security. To our knowledge, our work is the first that rigorously study Apple’s PSI for server-side content moderation within the broader context of secure messaging, addressing the diverse goals and security considerations of stakeholders when deploying larger systems.
Xavier Carril, Alicia Manuel Pasoot, Emanuele Parisi, Carlos Andrés Lara-Niño, Oriol Farràs, Miquel Moretó
Francesca Falzon, Laura Hetz, Annamira O'Toole
Moreover, Tapir is the first APIR scheme with preprocessing to support appends and edits in time linear in the database partition size. This makes it an ideal candidate for transparency applications that require support for integrity, database appends, and private lookups. We provide a formal security analysis and a prototype implementation that demonstrates our scheme’s efficiency. Tapir incurs as little as 0.11 % online bandwidth overhead for databases of size $2^{22}$, compared to the unauthenticated SinglePass. For databases of size $\geq 2^{20}$, our scheme, when instantiated with Merkle trees, outperforms all prior multi-server APIR schemes with respect to online runtime.
Davide Carnemolla, Dario Catalano, Valentina Frasca, Emanuele Giunta
Nouri Alnahawi, Alexander Wiesmaier
Our constructions combines three concepts: 1) Lattice KEMs with Splittable public keys of the form As+e as introduced in Arriaga et al. (AC24:ABJS), Alnahawi et al. (ePrint:2024/1957) and Arriaga et al. (ePrint:2025/1399). 2) The Programmable Only Once Function (POPF) realized as a 2-round Feistel (2F) as in McQuoid, Rosulek and Roy (CCS20:MRR) and Arriaga , Barbosa and Jarecki (ePrint:2025/231). 3) Rerandomizable KEM as introduced in Duverger et al. (CCS25:DFJ+).
Similar to the aforementioned works, our goal is to eliminate the usage of the Ideal Cipher (IC) in (O)EKE-style KEM-based PQC PAKEs, the motivation of which is adequately and extensively explained in the cited literature. Our main contribution lies within the following two aspects: 1) Mitigating malicious public key generation attacks in the NICE-PAKE construction. 2) Defining a mechanism to realize the missing group operation in the 2F public key authentication step in NoIC-PAKE. Briefly put, we utilize the rerandomization procedure of (CCS25:DFJ+) to sample a second uniform MLWE sample, which is in turn used to shift the initiator's public key forming another fresh sample that yields indistinguishable from uniform. By doing so, we assume that we can enhance the security of NICE-PAKE to withstand a certain class of attacks, and reduce the computational complexity of the 2F instantiation relying on obfuscation in the OQUAKE variant of the 2F PAKE, which was introduced by Vos et al. (ePrint:2025/1343).
Obviously, we cannot ascertain the security of our proposed constructions without conducting a complete and thorough formal analysis. Hence, remaining open questions and future work include defining an indistinguishable UC simulator in the ideal UC world that is also capable of extracting adversarial password guesses. Further, we need to identify the concrete KEM properties required to prove security in UC via the common game-hopping reductionist proof approach.
Huan-Chih Wang, Ja-Ling Wu
To create a more sustainable and secure AI world, we propose LIME, a pure HE-based PPML solution, by integrating two techniques: element-wise channel-to-slot packing (ECSP) and power-of-two channel pruning (PCP). ECSP leverages abundant slots to pack multiple samples within ciphertexts, facilitating batch inference. PCP prunes the channels of convolutional layers by powers of two, thereby reducing computational demands and enhancing the packing capabilities of pruned models. Additionally, we implement the ReLU-before-addition block in ResNet to mitigate accuracy degradation caused by approximations with quadratic polynomials.
We evaluated LIME using ResNet-20 on CIFAR-10, VGG-11 on CIFAR-100, and ResNet-18 on Tiny-ImageNet. Using the original models, LIME attains up to 2.1% and 8.4% accuracy improvements over the methods of Lee et al. (IEEE ACCESS’21) and AESPA (arXiv:2201.06699), which employ high- and low-degree polynomial ReLU approximations, respectively. Even with 75% parameter pruning, LIME retains higher accuracy than AESPA. Using the state-of-the-art ORION (ASPLOS '25) as the convolution backend and evaluating on the original models, LIME achieves speedups of 41.5$\times$ and 8$\times$ over ORION integrated with Lee et al. and AESPA, respectively. For models pruned by 90%, these speedups increase to 202.5$\times$ and 35.1$\times$, respectively.
Mihai Christodorescu, Earlence Fernandes, Ashish Hooda, Somesh Jha, Johann Rehberger, Khawaja Shams
01 December 2025
Department of Digital Security, Radboud University, Netherlands
Closing date for applications:
Contact: Simona Samardjiska, Radboud University
Columbia University
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Blockchain technology creates the abstraction of a “computer in the sky”---a global and shared programmable virtual machine that combines the general-purpose functionality of a computer with the decentralization and fault-tolerance of the Internet. A blockchain protocol plays a role similar to that of an operating system---an intermediate layer that insulates the application layer (i.e., smart contracts) from the hardware layer (i.e., the Internet) and acts as the “master program” that coordinates the execution of all the virtual machine’s system and user-installed programs. Blockchain technology can be viewed as adding state and data processing capabilities to traditional Internet infrastructure and, among other applications, it enables stronger forms of ownership of digital assets than society has ever had before.
Blockchain protocol design requires innovation in and the synthesis of a number of technically challenging fields, including distributed systems, game theory and mechanism design, cryptography, and more. The Columbia-Ethereum Center for Blockchain Protocol Design brings together the multi-disciplinary expertise at Columbia to advance the performance, security, robustness, and economics of this societally important technology.
The Center’s activities include research grants for Columbia faculty, students, and their collaborators; postdoctoral and graduate student fellowships; an industry research-in-residence program; and several events, including the Columbia Cryptoeconomics Workshop and an annual summer school.
Closing date for applications:
Contact: Tim Roughgarden (tr@cs.columbia.edu).
More information: https://www.engineering.columbia.edu/research-innovation/institutes-centers-initiatives/computational-sciences-ai/blockchain-protocol-design