Homomorphic signcryption with public plaintext-result checkability
Journal article, 2021

Signcryption originally proposed by Zheng (CRYPTO ' 97) is a useful cryptographic primitive that provides strong confidentiality and integrity guarantees. This article addresses the question whether it is possible to homomorphically compute arbitrary functions on signcrypted data. The answer is affirmative and a new cryptographic primitive, homomorphic signcryption (HSC) with public plaintext-result checkability is proposed that allows both to evaluate arbitrary functions over signcrypted data and makes it possible for anyone to publicly test whether a given ciphertext is the signcryption of the message under the key. Two notions of message privacy are also investigated: weak message privacy and message privacy depending on whether the original signcryptions used in the evaluation are disclosed or not. More precisely, the contributions are two-fold: (i) two different definitions of HSC with public plaintext-result checkability is provided for arbitrary functions in terms of syntax, unforgeability and message privacy depending on if the homomorphic computation is performed in a private or in a public evaluation setting, (ii) two HSC constructions are proposed: one for a public evaluation setting and another for a private evaluation setting and security is formally proved.

Author

Shimin Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Westone Information Industry Inc

Bei Liang

Yanqi Lake Beijing Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Applications

Aikaterini Mitrokotsa

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Networks and Systems (Chalmers)

University of St Gallen

Rui Xue

Chinese Academy of Sciences

IET Information Security

1751-8709 (ISSN) 17518717 (eISSN)

Vol. 15 5 333-350

Subject Categories

Other Computer and Information Science

Public Administration Studies

Computer Science

DOI

10.1049/ise2.12026

More information

Latest update

8/17/2021