Rotem Tsabary: Fully Secure Attribute-Based Encryption for t-CNF from LWE

Friday, October 11, 2019 - 10:30am to 12:00pm
Location: 
Hewlett, G882
Speaker: 
Rotem Tsabary

Abstract: 

Attribute-based Encryption (ABE), first introduced by [SW05, GPSW06], is a public key encryption system that can support multiple users with varying decryption permissions. One of the main properties of such schemes is the supported function class of policies. While there are fully secure constructions from bilinear maps for a fairly large class of policies, the situation with lattice-based constructions is less satisfactory and many efforts were made to close this gap. Prior to this work the only known fully secure lattice construction was for the class of point functions (also known as IBE).
In this talk we discuss the main challenges in proving full security of ABE schemes and new techniques to overcome those barriers. As a main result, we construct for the first time a lattice-based (ciphertext-policy) ABE for the function class t-CNF, which consists of CNF formulas where each clause depends on at most t bits of the input, for any constant t. This class includes NP-verification policies, bit-fixing policies and t-threshold policies. Towards this goal we also construct a fully secure single-key constrained PRF from OWF for the same function class, which might be of independent interest.