Multiparty Protocol that Usually Shuffles
Multiparty computation is raising importance because it's primary objective is to replace any trusted third party in the distributed computation. This work presents two multiparty shuffling protocols where each party, possesses a private input, agrees on a random permutation while keeping the permutation secret. The proposed shuffling protocols are based on permutation network, thereby data-oblivious. The first proposal is n-permute that permutes n inputs in all n! possible ways. n-permute network consists of 2logn-1 layers, and in each layer there are n/2 gates. Our second protocol is n_π-permute shuffling that defines a permutation set Π={π_1,…,π_N} where |Π| < n!, and the resultant shuffling is a random permutation π_i ∈Π. The n_π-permute network contains leases number of layers compare to n-permute network. Let n=n_1n_2, the n_π-permute network would define 2logn_1-1+logn_2 layers. The proposed shuffling protocols are unconditionally secure against malicious adversary who can corrupt at most t<n/3 parties. The probability that adversary can learn the outcome of n-permute is upper bound by ((n-t)!)^-1. Whereas, the probability that adversary can learn the outcome of n_π-permute is upper bounded by (f_Π(n_1-θ_1)^n_22^θ_2)^-1, for some positive integer θ_1, θ_2, and a recursive definition of f_Π. The protocols allow the parties to build quorums, and distribute the load among the quorums.
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