Pseudo-Equilibria, or: How to Stop Worrying About Crypto and Just Analyze the Game
Alexandros Psomas, Athina Terzoglou, Yu Wei, Vassilis Zikas

TL;DR
This paper introduces pseudo-Nash equilibria as a new solution concept to analyze cryptographic protocols within game theory, enabling a clearer separation of cryptographic assumptions from strategic analysis.
Contribution
It proposes pseudo-Nash equilibria to bridge ideal cryptography and real protocols, simplifying analysis and avoiding utility restrictions.
Findings
Pseudo-Nash equilibria are computationally indistinguishable from deviations.
Nash equilibria in ideal cryptography correspond to pseudo-Nash in real protocols.
The approach simplifies the analysis of cryptographic protocols in game-theoretic contexts.
Abstract
We consider the problem of a game theorist analyzing a game that uses cryptographic protocols. Ideally, a theorist abstracts protocols as ideal, implementation-independent primitives, letting conclusions in the "ideal world" carry over to the "real world." This is crucial, since the game theorist cannot--and should not be expected to--handle full cryptographic complexity. In today's landscape, the rise of distributed ledgers makes a shared language between cryptography and game theory increasingly necessary. The security of cryptographic protocols hinges on two types of assumptions: state-of-the-world (e.g., "factoring is hard") and behavioral (e.g., "honest majority"). We observe that for protocols relying on behavioral assumptions (e.g., ledgers), our goal is unattainable in full generality. For state-of-the-world assumptions, we show that standard solution concepts, e.g.,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Authentication Protocols Security · Cryptography and Data Security · Security in Wireless Sensor Networks
