Paper 2025/1949

On the Credibility of Deniable Communication in Court

Jacob Leiken, New York University
Sunoo Park, New York University
Abstract

Over time, cryptographically deniable systems have come to be associated in computer-science literature with the idea of "denying" evidence in court — specifically, with the ability to convincingly forge evidence in courtroom scenarios, and relatedly, an inability to authenticate evidence in such contexts. Indeed, in some cryptographic models, the ability to falsify mathematically implies the inability to authenticate. Evidentiary processes in courts, however, have been developed over centuries to account for the reality that evidence has always been forgeable, and relies on factors outside of cryptographic models to seek the truth "as well as possible" while acknowledging that all evidence is imperfect. We argue that deniability does not and need not change this paradigm. Our analysis highlights a gap between technical deniability notions and their application to the real world. There will essentially always be factors outside a cryptographic model that influence perceptions of a message's authenticity, in realistic situations. We propose the broader concept of credibility to capture these factors. The credibility of a system is determined by (1) a threshold of quality that a forgery must pass to be "believable" as an original communication, which varies based on sociotechnical context and threat model, (2) the ease of creating a forgery that passes this threshold, which is also context- and threat-model-dependent, and (3) default system retention policy and retention settings. All three aspects are important for designing secure communication systems for real-world threat models, and some aspects of (2) and (3) may be incorporated directly into technical system design. We hope that our model of credibility will facilitate system design and deployment that addresses threats that are not and cannot be captured by purely technical definitions and existing cryptographic models, and support more nuanced discourse on the strengths and limitations of cryptographic guarantees within specific legal and sociotechnical contexts.

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Applications
Publication info
Preprint.
Keywords
cryptographydeniabilitylawsociotechnicalcredibility
Contact author(s)
jrl9854 @ nyu edu
sunoo park @ nyu edu
History
2026-01-23: last of 2 revisions
2025-10-18: received
See all versions
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2025/1949
License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial
CC BY-NC

BibTeX

@misc{cryptoeprint:2025/1949,
      author = {Jacob Leiken and Sunoo Park},
      title = {On the Credibility of Deniable Communication in Court},
      howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2025/1949},
      year = {2025},
      url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2025/1949}
}
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