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Paper 2022/190

Short-lived zero-knowledge proofs and signatures

Arasu Arun and Joseph Bonneau and Jeremy Clark

Abstract

We introduce the short-lived proof, a non-interactive proof of knowledge with a novel feature: after a specified period of time, the proof is no longer convincing. This time-delayed loss of soundness happens "naturally" without further involvement from the prover or any third party. We propose formal definitions for short-lived proofs as well as the special case of short-lived signatures. We show several practical constructions built using verifiable delay functions (VDFs). The key idea in our approach is to allow any party to forge any proof by executing a large sequential computation. Some constructions achieve a stronger property called reusable forgeability in which one sequential computation allows forging an arbitrary number of proofs of different statements. Our work also introduces two novel types of VDFs, re-randomizable VDFs and zero-knowledge VDFs, which may be of independent interest.

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Cryptographic protocols
Publication info
Preprint. MINOR revision.
Keywords
zero knowledgeRSAdigital signaturesVDFs
Contact author(s)
jbonneau @ gmail com,aa7977 @ nyu edu,j clark @ concordia ca
History
2022-02-20: received
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2022/190
License
Creative Commons Attribution
CC BY
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