Secrecy without one-way functions
Dima Grigoriev, Vladimir Shpilrain

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that certain cryptographic tasks, such as secure computation and mental poker, can be achieved without one-way functions by concealing intermediate results and using multi-party protocols, challenging the necessity of traditional assumptions.
Contribution
It introduces novel protocols for secure computation, commitment, and secret sharing that do not rely on one-way functions, including multi-party schemes and the use of dummy parties.
Findings
Secure sum and product computations without intermediate data disclosure
Bit commitment schemes for three or more parties without one-way functions
Protocols for mental poker and secret sharing with negligible computational cost
Abstract
We show that some problems in information security can be solved without using one-way functions. The latter are usually regarded as a central concept of cryptography, but the very existence of one-way functions depends on difficult conjectures in complexity theory, most notably on the notorious "" conjecture. In this paper, we suggest protocols for secure computation of the sum, product, and some other functions, without using any one-way functions. A new input that we offer here is that, in contrast with other proposals, we conceal "intermediate results" of a computation. For example, when we compute the sum of numbers, only the final result is known to the parties; partial sums are not known to anybody. Other applications of our method include voting/rating over insecure channels and a rather elegant and efficient solution of Yao's "millionaires' problem". Then,…
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