A Survey on Homomorphic Encryption Schemes: Theory and Implementation
Abbas Acar, Hidayet Aksu, A. Selcuk Uluagac, Mauro Conti

TL;DR
This survey comprehensively reviews homomorphic encryption schemes, detailing their theoretical foundations, implementations, and recent advancements, highlighting challenges and future research directions in making FHE practical.
Contribution
It provides an in-depth overview of HE, PHE, SWHE, and FHE schemes, including recent improvements and implementation insights, serving as a foundational resource for researchers and practitioners.
Findings
FHE schemes have evolved significantly since Gentry's 2009 breakthrough.
Current implementations still face practical efficiency challenges.
Future research is needed to improve the practicality of FHE systems.
Abstract
Legacy encryption systems depend on sharing a key (public or private) among the peers involved in exchanging an encrypted message. However, this approach poses privacy concerns. Especially with popular cloud services, the control over the privacy of the sensitive data is lost. Even when the keys are not shared, the encrypted material is shared with a third party that does not necessarily need to access the content. Moreover, untrusted servers, providers, and cloud operators can keep identifying elements of users long after users end the relationship with the services. Indeed, Homomorphic Encryption (HE), a special kind of encryption scheme, can address these concerns as it allows any third party to operate on the encrypted data without decrypting it in advance. Although this extremely useful feature of the HE scheme has been known for over 30 years, the first plausible and achievable…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCryptography and Data Security · Chaos-based Image/Signal Encryption · Coding theory and cryptography
