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Results 1911 - 1920 of 23883

Video
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June 24, 2025
Pseudorandom Obfuscation
Video
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June 24, 2025
Pseudorandom Obfuscation
Video
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June 24, 2025
Lattice Assumptions with Hints: Succinct LWE and its Applications
Video
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June 24, 2025
Obfuscation via GGH15 Encodings, 10 Years Later
Video
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June 24, 2025
Computational Wiretap Coding from Indistinguishability Obfuscation
Video
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June 24, 2025
Beyond P versus NP: Using Complexity Theory in Obfuscation and Vice-Versa
Video
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June 24, 2025
Towards general-purpose program obfuscation via local mixing
Video
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June 24, 2025
Indistinguishability Obfuscation from Bilinear Maps and LPN Variants
Video
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June 24, 2025
Expedition to Obfustopia: Indistinguishability Obfuscation from Well-Studied Assumptions to New...
Workshop Talk
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June 23, 2025

Computational Wiretap Coding from Indistinguishability Obfuscation

A wiretap coding scheme for a pair of noisy channels (ChB, ChE) enables Alice to reliably communicate a message to Bob by sending its encoding over ChB, while hiding the message from an adversary Eve who obtains the same encoding over ChE.

A necessary condition for the feasibility of wiretap coding is that ChB is not a degradation of ChE, namely Eve cannot simulate Bob’s view. While insufficient in the information-theoretic setting, a recent work of Ishai, Korb, Lou, and Sahai (Crypto 2022) showed that the nondegradation condition is sufficient in the computational setting, assuming idealized flavors of obfuscation. The question of basing a similar feasibility result on standard cryptographic assumptions was left open, even in simple special cases.

In this work, we settle the question for all discrete memoryless channels where the (common) input alphabet of ChB and ChE is binary, and with arbitrary finite output alphabet, under standard (sub-exponential) hardness assumptions: namely those assumptions that imply indistinguishability obfuscation (Jain-Lin-Sahai 2021, 2022), and injective PRGs. In particular, this establishes the feasibility of computational wiretap coding when ChB is a binary symmetric channel with crossover probability p and ChE is a binary erasure channel with erasure probability e, where e > 2p.

On the information-theoretic side, our result builds on a new polytope characterization of channel degradation for pairs of binary-input channels, which may be of independent interest.

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