Paper 2021/221
The Direction of Updatable Encryption Does Matter
Ryo Nishimaki
Abstract
We introduce a new definition for key updates, called backward-leak uni-directional key updates, in updatable encryption (UE). This notion is a variant of uni-directional key updates for UE. We show that existing secure UE schemes in the bi-directional key updates setting are not secure in the backward-leak uni-directional key updates setting. This result is in sharp contrast to the equivalence theorem by Jiang (Asiacrypt 2020), which says security in the bi-directional key updates setting is equivalent to security in the uni-directional key updates setting. We call the existing uni-directional key updates ``forward-leak uni-directional'' key updates to distinguish two types of uni-directional key updates in this paper. We also present two UE schemes with the following features. - The first scheme is post-quantum secure in the backward-leak uni-directional key updates setting under the learning with errors assumption. - The second scheme is secure in the no-directional key updates setting and based on indistinguishability obfuscation and one-way functions. This result solves the open problem left by Jiang (Asiacrypt 2020).
Note: The presentation was improved. (5/31/2021)
Metadata
- Available format(s)
- Category
- Public-key cryptography
- Publication info
- Preprint. MINOR revision.
- Keywords
- updatable encryptionkey updatelattice
- Contact author(s)
- ryo nishimaki zk @ hco ntt co jp
- History
- 2024-04-19: last of 8 revisions
- 2021-03-02: received
- See all versions
- Short URL
- https://ia.cr/2021/221
- License
-
CC BY