Server-Aided Revocable Predicate Encryption: Formalization and Lattice-Based Instantiation
San Ling, Khoa Nguyen, Huaxiong Wang, Juanyang Zhang

TL;DR
This paper formalizes server-aided revocable predicate encryption (SR-PE), introduces a lattice-based scheme using LWE hardness, and proves its security in the standard model, enabling efficient user revocation in fine-grained encrypted data access.
Contribution
It formalizes SR-PE with rigorous security definitions and provides the first lattice-based instantiation with proven security in the standard model.
Findings
Scheme is secure under LWE assumption.
Achieves efficient user revocation in predicate encryption.
Operates in the standard cryptographic model.
Abstract
Efficient user revocation is a necessary but challenging problem in many multi-user cryptosystems. Among known approaches, server-aided revocation yields a promising solution, because it allows to outsource the major workloads of system users to a computationally powerful third party, called the server, whose only requirement is to carry out the computations correctly. Such a revocation mechanism was considered in the settings of identity-based encryption and attribute-based encryption by Qin et al. (ESORICS 2015) and Cui et al. (ESORICS 2016), respectively. In this work, we consider the server-aided revocation mechanism in the more elaborate setting of predicate encryption (PE). The latter, introduced by Katz, Sahai, and Waters (EUROCRYPT 2008), provides fine-grained and role-based access to encrypted data and can be viewed as a generalization of identity-based and attribute-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCryptography and Data Security · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Privacy-Preserving Technologies in Data
