PIR schemes with small download complexity and low storage requirements
Simon R. Blackburn, Tuvi Etzion, Maura B. Paterson

TL;DR
This paper advances Private Information Retrieval schemes by reducing download complexity and storage needs, providing new bounds, constructions, and techniques for efficient, secure data retrieval across multiple servers.
Contribution
It generalizes bounds on download complexity for bounded server numbers and introduces simpler, more efficient PIR schemes with improved performance and lower upload costs.
Findings
Established bounds on download complexity for PIR with bounded servers
Developed explicit schemes achieving optimal asymptotic download cost
Provided techniques to improve worst-case download performance
Abstract
In the classical model for (information theoretically secure) Private Information Retrieval (PIR), a user wishes to retrieve one bit of a database that is stored on a set of servers, in such a way that no individual server gains information about which bit the user is interested in. The aim is to design schemes that minimise communication between the user and the servers. More recently, there have been moves to consider more realistic models where the total storage of the set of servers, or the per server storage, should be minimised (possibly using techniques from distributed storage), and where the database is divided into -bit records with , and the user wishes to retrieve one record rather than one bit. When is large, downloads from the servers to the user dominate the communication complexity and so the aim is to minimise the total number of downloaded bits. Shah,…
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