Amitalok J. Budkuley, Pranav Joshi, Manideep Mamindlapally, Anuj Kumar Yadav
{"title":"逆向弹性通道的承诺能力研究","authors":"Amitalok J. Budkuley, Pranav Joshi, Manideep Mamindlapally, Anuj Kumar Yadav","doi":"10.1109/ITW48936.2021.9611485","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this work, we study commitment over a class of channels called reverse elastic channels (RECs). In the commitment problem, two mutually distrustful parties, say Alice and Bob, seek to commit on a bit string available to Alice. The parties interact via a commitment protocol comprising two phases, viz., commit phase followed by reveal phase. Alice commits to a string, and transmits it to Bob securely in a manner Bob cannot learn it until Alice chooses to reveal it; at the time of reveal, however, Bob can successfully detect if Alice cheats. It is well known that noisy channels are a promising resource to realize information-theoretically secure commitment; however, oftentimes, channel behaviour may be poorly characterized thereby limiting the commitment throughput and/or degrading the security guarantees. Particularly problematic is a scenario where dishonest parties can actively alter the channel characteristics. RECs are an interesting class of such unreliable channels, where essentially only a dishonest committer Alice can meaningfully alter the channel; RECs have attracted active recent interest. Our principal contribution is the REC commitment capacity characterization for all parameters; this proves a recent related conjecture. Apart from presenting an achievable scheme, a key result in our work is a tight converse which analyses a specific cheating strategy by Alice. The significance of RECs stems from the fact that along with elastic channels (ECs), where only a dishonest receiver Bob can alter the channel, these two channel models represent special cases of the more widely studied unfair noisy channels (UNCs). Interestingly, for a given set of parameters, our result shows that the REC commitment capacity is no larger than that for the ECs. Furthermore, similar to the ECs, RECs offer non-trivial commitment throughput for all meaningful parameters; this is in stark contrast to UNCs where the throughput may possibly be zero.","PeriodicalId":325229,"journal":{"name":"2021 IEEE Information Theory Workshop (ITW)","volume":"21 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"On the Commitment Capacity of Reverse Elastic Channels\",\"authors\":\"Amitalok J. Budkuley, Pranav Joshi, Manideep Mamindlapally, Anuj Kumar Yadav\",\"doi\":\"10.1109/ITW48936.2021.9611485\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In this work, we study commitment over a class of channels called reverse elastic channels (RECs). In the commitment problem, two mutually distrustful parties, say Alice and Bob, seek to commit on a bit string available to Alice. The parties interact via a commitment protocol comprising two phases, viz., commit phase followed by reveal phase. Alice commits to a string, and transmits it to Bob securely in a manner Bob cannot learn it until Alice chooses to reveal it; at the time of reveal, however, Bob can successfully detect if Alice cheats. It is well known that noisy channels are a promising resource to realize information-theoretically secure commitment; however, oftentimes, channel behaviour may be poorly characterized thereby limiting the commitment throughput and/or degrading the security guarantees. Particularly problematic is a scenario where dishonest parties can actively alter the channel characteristics. RECs are an interesting class of such unreliable channels, where essentially only a dishonest committer Alice can meaningfully alter the channel; RECs have attracted active recent interest. Our principal contribution is the REC commitment capacity characterization for all parameters; this proves a recent related conjecture. Apart from presenting an achievable scheme, a key result in our work is a tight converse which analyses a specific cheating strategy by Alice. The significance of RECs stems from the fact that along with elastic channels (ECs), where only a dishonest receiver Bob can alter the channel, these two channel models represent special cases of the more widely studied unfair noisy channels (UNCs). Interestingly, for a given set of parameters, our result shows that the REC commitment capacity is no larger than that for the ECs. 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On the Commitment Capacity of Reverse Elastic Channels
In this work, we study commitment over a class of channels called reverse elastic channels (RECs). In the commitment problem, two mutually distrustful parties, say Alice and Bob, seek to commit on a bit string available to Alice. The parties interact via a commitment protocol comprising two phases, viz., commit phase followed by reveal phase. Alice commits to a string, and transmits it to Bob securely in a manner Bob cannot learn it until Alice chooses to reveal it; at the time of reveal, however, Bob can successfully detect if Alice cheats. It is well known that noisy channels are a promising resource to realize information-theoretically secure commitment; however, oftentimes, channel behaviour may be poorly characterized thereby limiting the commitment throughput and/or degrading the security guarantees. Particularly problematic is a scenario where dishonest parties can actively alter the channel characteristics. RECs are an interesting class of such unreliable channels, where essentially only a dishonest committer Alice can meaningfully alter the channel; RECs have attracted active recent interest. Our principal contribution is the REC commitment capacity characterization for all parameters; this proves a recent related conjecture. Apart from presenting an achievable scheme, a key result in our work is a tight converse which analyses a specific cheating strategy by Alice. The significance of RECs stems from the fact that along with elastic channels (ECs), where only a dishonest receiver Bob can alter the channel, these two channel models represent special cases of the more widely studied unfair noisy channels (UNCs). Interestingly, for a given set of parameters, our result shows that the REC commitment capacity is no larger than that for the ECs. Furthermore, similar to the ECs, RECs offer non-trivial commitment throughput for all meaningful parameters; this is in stark contrast to UNCs where the throughput may possibly be zero.