In cryptography, an oblivious transfer (OT) protocol is a type of protocol in which a sender transfers one of potentially many pieces of information to a receiver, but remains oblivious as to what piece (if any) has been transferred.

The first form of oblivious transfer was introduced in 1981 by Michael O. Rabin.[1] In this form, the sender sends a message to the receiver with probability 1/2, while the sender remains oblivious as to whether or not the receiver received the message. Rabin's oblivious transfer scheme is based on the RSA cryptosystem. A more useful form of oblivious transfer called 1–2 oblivious transfer or "1 out of 2 oblivious transfer", was developed later by Shimon Even, Oded Goldreich, and Abraham Lempel,[2] in order to build protocols for secure multiparty computation. It is generalized to "1 out of n oblivious transfer" where the user gets exactly one database element without the server getting to know which element was queried, and without the user knowing anything about the other elements that were not retrieved. The latter notion of oblivious transfer is a strengthening of private information retrieval, in which the database is not kept private.

Claude Crépeau showed that Rabin's oblivious transfer is equivalent to 1–2 oblivious transfer.[3]

Further work has revealed oblivious transfer to be a fundamental and important problem in cryptography. It is considered one of the critical problems in the field, because of the importance of the applications that can be built based on it. In particular, it is complete for secure multiparty computation: that is, given an implementation of oblivious transfer it is possible to securely evaluate any polynomial time computable function without any additional primitive.[4]

Rabin's oblivious transfer protocol

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In Rabin's oblivious transfer protocol, the sender generates an RSA public modulus N=pq where p and q are large prime numbers, and an exponent e relatively prime to λ(N) = (p − 1)(q − 1). The sender encrypts the message m as me mod N.

  1. The sender sends N, e, and me mod N to the receiver.
  2. The receiver picks a random x modulo N and sends x2 mod N to the sender. Note that gcd(x,N) = 1 with overwhelming probability, which ensures that there are 4 square roots of x2 mod N.
  3. The sender finds a square root y of x2 mod N and sends y to the receiver.

If the receiver finds y is neither x nor −x modulo N, the receiver will be able to factor N and therefore decrypt me to recover m (see Rabin encryption for more details). However, if y is x or −x mod N, the receiver will have no information about m beyond the encryption of it. Since every quadratic residue modulo N has four square roots, the probability that the receiver learns m is 1/2.

1–2 oblivious transfer

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In a 1–2 oblivious transfer protocol, Alice the sender has two messages m0 and m1, and wants to ensure that the receiver only learns one. Bob, the receiver, has a bit b and wishes to receive mb without Alice learning b. The protocol of Even, Goldreich, and Lempel (which the authors attribute partially to Silvio Micali) is general, but can be instantiated using RSA encryption as follows.

Alice Bob
Calculus Secret Public Public Secret Calculus
Messages to be sent  
Generate RSA key pair and send public portion to Bob         Receive public key
Generate two random messages       Receive random messages
  Choose   and generate random  
      Compute the encryption of  , blind with   and send to Alice
One of these will equal  , but Alice does not know which.  
Send both messages to Bob       Receive both messages
  Bob decrypts the   since he knows which   he selected earlier.
  1. Alice has two messages,   and wants to send exactly one of them to Bob. Bob does not want Alice to know which one he receives.
  2. Alice generates an RSA key pair, comprising the modulus  , the public exponent   and the private exponent  .
  3. She also generates two random values,   and sends them to Bob along with her public modulus and exponent.
  4. Bob picks   to be either 0 or 1, and selects  .
  5. Bob generates a random value   uses it to blind   by computing  , which he sends to Alice.
  6. Alice combines   with both of her random values to produce:   and  . Now   will be equal to   and the other will be a meaningless random value. However since Alice does not know the value of   that Bob chose, she cannot determine which of   and   is equal to  .
  7. She combines the two secret messages with each of the possible keys,   and  , and sends them both to Bob.
  8. Bob knows  , so he is able to compute  . However, since he does not know  , he cannot compute   and so cannot determine  .

1-out-of-n oblivious transfer and k-out-of-n oblivious transfer

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A 1-out-of-n oblivious transfer protocol can be defined as a natural generalization of a 1-out-of-2 oblivious transfer protocol. Specifically, a sender has n messages, and the receiver has an index i, and the receiver wishes to receive the i-th among the sender's messages, without the sender learning i, while the sender wants to ensure that the receiver receive only one of the n messages.

1-out-of-n oblivious transfer is incomparable to private information retrieval (PIR). On the one hand, 1-out-of-n oblivious transfer imposes an additional privacy requirement for the database: namely, that the receiver learn at most one of the database entries. On the other hand, PIR requires communication sublinear in n, whereas 1-out-of-n oblivious transfer has no such requirement. However, assuming single server PIR is a sufficient assumption in order to construct 1-out-of-2 Oblivious Transfer.[5]

1-out-of-n oblivious transfer protocol with sublinear communication was first constructed (as a generalization of single-server PIR) by Eyal Kushilevitz and Rafail Ostrovsky.[6] More efficient constructions were proposed by Moni Naor and Benny Pinkas,[7] William Aiello, Yuval Ishai and Omer Reingold,[8] Sven Laur and Helger Lipmaa.[9] In 2017, Kolesnikov et al.,[10] proposed an efficient 1-n oblivious transfer protocol which requires roughly 4x the cost of 1-2 oblivious transfer in amortized setting.

Brassard, Crépeau and Robert further generalized this notion to k-n oblivious transfer,[11] wherein the receiver obtains a set of k messages from the n message collection. The set of k messages may be received simultaneously ("non-adaptively"), or they may be requested consecutively, with each request based on previous messages received.[12]

Generalized oblivious transfer

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k-n Oblivious transfer is a special case of generalized oblivious transfer, which was presented by Ishai and Kushilevitz.[13] In that setting, the sender has a set U of n messages, and the transfer constraints are specified by a collection A of permissible subsets of U. The receiver may obtain any subset of the messages in U that appears in the collection A. The sender should remain oblivious of the selection made by the receiver, while the receiver cannot learn the value of the messages outside the subset of messages that he chose to obtain. The collection A is monotone decreasing, in the sense that it is closed under containment (i.e., if a given subset B is in the collection A, so are all of the subsets of B). The solution proposed by Ishai and Kushilevitz uses the parallel invocations of 1-2 oblivious transfer while making use of a special model of private protocols. Later on, other solutions that are based on secret sharing were published – one by Bhavani Shankar, Kannan Srinathan, and C. Pandu Rangan,[14] and another by Tamir Tassa.[15]

Origins

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In the early seventies Stephen Wiesner introduced a primitive called multiplexing in his seminal paper "Conjugate Coding", which was the starting point of quantum cryptography.[16] Unfortunately it took more than ten years to be published. Even though this primitive was equivalent to what was later called 1–2 oblivious transfer, Wiesner did not see its application to cryptography.

Quantum oblivious transfer

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Protocols for oblivious transfer can be implemented with quantum systems. In contrast to other tasks in quantum cryptography, like quantum key distribution, it has been shown that quantum oblivious transfer cannot be implemented with unconditional security, i.e. the security of quantum oblivious transfer protocols cannot be guaranteed only from the laws of quantum physics.[17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Michael O. Rabin. "How to exchange secrets with oblivious transfer." Technical Report TR-81, Aiken Computation Laboratory, Harvard University, 1981. Scanned handwriting + typed version on eprint.iacr.org archive Archived 2021-11-23 at the Wayback Machine. Typed version available on Dousti's homepage.
  2. ^ S. Even, O. Goldreich, and A. Lempel, "A Randomized Protocol for Signing Contracts", Communications of the ACM, Volume 28, Issue 6, pg. 637–647, 1985.
  3. ^ Claude Crépeau. "Equivalence between two flavours of oblivious transfer". In Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO '87, volume 293 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 350–354. Springer, 1988
  4. ^ Joe Kilian. "Founding Cryptography on Oblivious Transfer", Proceedings, 20th Annual ACM Symposium on the Theory of Computation (STOC), 1988. Paper at ACM portal (subscription required)
  5. ^ Giovanni Di Crescenzo, Tal Malkin, Rafail Ostrovsky: Single Database Private Information Retrieval Implies Oblivious Transfer. EUROCRYPT 2000: 122-138
  6. ^ Eyal Kushilevitz, Rafail Ostrovsky: Replication is NOT Needed: SINGLE Database, Computationally-Private Information Retrieval. FOCS 1997: 364-373
  7. ^ Moni Naor and Benny Pinkas (1990). Oblivious Polynomial Evaluation Archived 2017-08-12 at the Wayback Machine 31st STOC
  8. ^ William Aiello, Yuval Ishai and Omer Reingold (2001) Priced Oblivious Transfer: How to Sell Digital Goods Archived 2016-03-27 at the Wayback Machine EUROCRYPT '01 Proceedings of the International Conference on the Theory and Application of Cryptographic Techniques: Advances in Cryptology, pages 119–135
  9. ^ Sven Laur and Helger Lipmaa (2007). "A New Protocol for Conditional Disclosure of Secrets And Its Applications". In Jonathan Katz and Moti Yung, editors, ACNS, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4521: 207–225. Springer, Heidelberg.
  10. ^ Vladimir Kolesnikov, Ranjit Kumaresan, Mike Rosulek, and Ni Trieu (2017). "Efficient batched oblivious prf with applications to private set intersection" Archived 2017-07-11 at the Wayback Machine. In Edgar R.Weippl, Stefan Katzenbeisser, Christopher Kruegel, Andrew C. Myers, and Shai Halevi, editors, ACM CCS 16, pages 818–829. ACM Press, October 2016.
  11. ^ Gilles Brassard, Claude Crépeau and Jean-Marc Robert. "All-or-nothing disclosure of secrets." In Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO ’86, volume 263 of LNCS, pages 234–238. Springer, 1986.
  12. ^ Moni Naor and Benny Pinkas. "Oblivious transfer with adaptive queries." In Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO ’99, volume 1666 of LNCS, pages 573–590. Springer, 1999.
  13. ^ Yuval Ishai and Eyal Kushilevitz. "Private simultaneous messages protocols with applications." In Proc. of ISTCS’97, IEEE Computer Society, pages 174–184, 1997.
  14. ^ Bhavani Shankar, Kannan Srinathan and C. Pandu Rangan. "Alternative protocols for generalized oblivious transfer". In Proc. of ICDCN’08, LNCS 4904, pages 304–309, 2008.
  15. ^ Tamir Tassa. "Generalized oblivious transfer by secret sharing". Designs, Codes and Cryptography, Volume 58:1, pages 11–21, January 2011. Paper at openu.ac.il Archived 2011-04-01 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Stephen Wiesner, "Conjugate coding", Sigact News, vol. 15, no. 1, 1983, pp. 78–88; original manuscript written circa 1970.
  17. ^ Lo, H.-K. (1997). "Insecurity of quantum secure computations". Phys. Rev. A. 56 (2): 1154–1162. arXiv:quant-ph/9611031. Bibcode:1997PhRvA..56.1154L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.56.1154. S2CID 17813922. Archived from the original on 2019-07-21. Retrieved 2019-07-21.
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  • Helger Lipmaa's collection of Web links on the topic