Fiat–Shamir heuristic

The Fiat–Shamir heuristic is a technique in cryptography for taking an interactive proof of knowledge and creating a digital signature based on it. This way, some fact (for example, knowledge of a certain number secret to the public) can be proven without revealing underlying information. The technique is due to Fiat and Shamir (1986).[1] The original interactive proof must have the property of being public-coin, for the method to work. For the algorithm specified below, a reader should be familiar with the laws of modular arithmetic, especially with multiplicative groups of integers modulo n with prime n.

The heuristic was originally presented without a proof of security; later, Pointcheval and Stern [2] proved its security against chosen message attacks in the random oracle model, that is, under the assumption that random oracles exist. In the case that random oracles don't exist, the Fiat–Shamir heuristic has been proven insecure by Shafi Goldwasser and Yael Tauman Kalai.[3] The Fiat–Shamir heuristic thus demonstrates a major application of random oracles. If the hash value used below does not depend on the (public) value of y, the security of the scheme is weakened, as a malicious prover can then select a certain value x so that the product cx is known.[4]

More generally, the Fiat–Shamir heuristic may also be viewed as converting a public-coin interactive proof of knowledge into a non-interactive proof of knowledge. If the interactive proof is an identification protocol, then the non-interactive version can be used directly as a digital signature.

Example

Here is an interactive proof of knowledge of a discrete logarithm.[5]

  1. Alice wants to prove to Bob that she knows : the discrete logarithm of to the base .
  2. She picks a random , computes and sends to Bob.
  3. Bob picks a random and sends it to Alice.
  4. Alice computes and returns to Bob.
  5. He checks whether . This holds because .

Fiat–Shamir heuristic allows to replace the interactive step 3 with a non-interactive random oracle access. In practice, we can use a cryptographic hash function instead.[6]

  1. Alice wants to prove that she knows : the discrete logarithm of to the base .
  2. She picks a random and computes .
  3. Alice computes , where is a cryptographic hash function.
  4. She computes . The resulting proof is the pair . As is an exponent of , it is calculated modulo , not modulo .
  5. Anyone can check whether .

See also

References

  1. Amos Fiat and Adi Shamir: How to Prove Yourself: Practical Solutions to Identification and Signature Problems. CRYPTO 1986: pp. 186-194
  2. David Pointcheval and Jacques Stern: Security Proofs for Signature Schemes. EUROCRYPT 1996: pp. 387-398
  3. Shafi Goldwasser and Yael Kalai: On the (In)security of the Fiat-Shamir Paradigm. FOCS 2003: pp. 102
  4. Bernhard, David; Pereira, Olivier; Warinschi, Bogdan. "How not to Prove Yourself: Pitfalls of the Fiat-Shamir Heuristic and Applications to Helios" (PDF). In Wang, Xiaoyun; Sako, Kazue. Advances in Cryptology – ASIACRYPT 2012. pp. 626–643.
  5. Camenisch, Jan; Stadler, Markus (1997). "Proof Systems for General Statements about Discrete Logarithms" (PDF). Dept. of Computer Science, ETH Zurich.
  6. Bellare, Mihir; Rogaway, Phillip (1993). "Random Oracles are Practical: A Paradigm for Designing Efficient Protocols". ACM.
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