Fairness versus guaranteed output delivery in secure multiparty computation
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1698398
DOI10.1007/S00145-016-9245-5zbMath1386.94067OpenAlexW606919767MaRDI QIDQ1698398
Publication date: 15 February 2018
Published in: Journal of Cryptology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00145-016-9245-5
broadcastsecure multiparty computationcomplete fairnessguaranteed output deliveryidentifiable aborttheoretic foundations
Related Items (11)
Guaranteed output in \(O(\sqrt{n})\) rounds for round-robin sampling protocols ⋮ On fully secure MPC with solitary output ⋮ Network-agnostic security comes (almost) for free in DKG and MPC ⋮ Must the communication graph of MPC protocols be an expander? ⋮ On the power of an honest majority in three-party computation without broadcast ⋮ From fairness to full security in multiparty computation ⋮ Multiparty generation of an RSA modulus ⋮ Adaptively secure MPC with sublinear communication complexity ⋮ Always have a backup plan: fully secure synchronous MPC with asynchronous fallback ⋮ Multiparty generation of an RSA modulus ⋮ Broadcast-optimal two-round MPC
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Security and composition of multiparty cryptographic protocols
- Security against covert adversaries: Efficient protocols for realistic adversaries
- Secure multi-party computation without agreement
- Fairness versus Guaranteed Output Delivery in Secure Multiparty Computation
- Authenticated Algorithms for Byzantine Agreement
- Complete Fairness in Multi-party Computation without an Honest Majority
- Reaching Agreement in the Presence of Faults
- The Byzantine Generals Problem
- Foundations of Cryptography
- Unconditional Byzantine agreement for any number of faulty processors
- Detectable byzantine agreement secure against faulty majorities
- Towards Characterizing Complete Fairness in Secure Two-Party Computation
This page was built for publication: Fairness versus guaranteed output delivery in secure multiparty computation