Combinatorial Solutions Providing Improved Security for the Generalized Russian Cards Problem
Colleen M. Swanson, Douglas R. Stinson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a formal mathematical framework for the generalized Russian cards problem, characterizing secure and informative strategies using combinatorial designs, and establishing conditions for optimal communication and security.
Contribution
It provides the first rigorous security definitions and a combinatorial characterization of strategies, including optimal communication complexity and conditions for security in the generalized problem.
Findings
Characterization of informative strategies via t-designs
Necessary conditions for secure and informative deals
Explicit conditions for deals with perfect security
Abstract
We present the first formal mathematical presentation of the generalized Russian cards problem, and provide rigorous security definitions that capture both basic and extended versions of weak and perfect security notions. In the generalized Russian cards problem, three players, Alice, Bob, and Cathy, are dealt a deck of cards, each given , , and cards, respectively. The goal is for Alice and Bob to learn each other's hands via public communication, without Cathy learning the fate of any particular card. The basic idea is that Alice announces a set of possible hands she might hold, and Bob, using knowledge of his own hand, should be able to learn Alice's cards from this announcement, but Cathy should not. Using a combinatorial approach, we are able to give a nice characterization of informative strategies (i.e., strategies allowing Bob to learn Alice's hand), having optimal…
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Taxonomy
Topicsgraph theory and CDMA systems · Coding theory and cryptography · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs
