U.S. flag   An unofficial archive of your favorite United States government website
Dot gov

Official websites do not use .rip
We are an unofficial archive, replace .rip by .gov in the URL to access the official website. Access our document index here.

Https

We are building a provable archive!
A lock (Dot gov) or https:// don't prove our archive is authentic, only that you securely accessed it. Note that we are working to fix that :)

Presentation

Feedback about the NIST Threshold Call/Process

September 28, 2023

Description

Abstract. The brief session 1b within MPTS 2023 (NIST Workshop for Multi-Party Threshold Schemes 2023) allows for additional oral comments about the NIST Threshold Call/Process. The number of allowed interventions will be limited to the available time slot. Each intervention should not exceed 3 minutes.

List of interventions (time in the edited session video: main commenter: informal description of topic):

  • 00:00: Luís Brandão: Introducing the feedback session.
  • 00:50: Thomas Prest: Number of queries to define security.
  • 05:10: Jonathan Katz: Submissions with various parts versus multiple submissions.
  • 07:00: Luís Brandão: Motivate conversation on networking.
  • 07:34: Aniket Kate (AK): On networking assumptions and gadgets.
  • 09:48: Nigel Smart: On too many options to implement.
  • 12:39: Jonathan Katz: Communication model (broadcast; point-to-point).
  • 17:15: Aniket Kate: On (in)comparability of efficiency between various options.
  • 19:06: Samuel Ranellucci: How much rigor to strive for in a specification.
  • 21:08: Rene Peralta: On evaluation of security arguments / community consensus.
  • 21:34: Luís Brandão: Wrapping up the feedback session.

During the session, a slide was shown with several suggested topics:

  1. Scope of the Threshold Call: refinements to the description of subcategories.
  2. Submission requirements in the Threshold Call: needed clarifications.
  3. Expressions of interest: intended concrete submissions (and possible submitter team).
  4. Need and adoptability: special features and primitives useful for specific applications.
  5. Inspiration: suggestions to the community, for submission of concrete threshold schemes.
  6. Frameworks: pertinent system models, security formulations, and threshold parameters.
  7. Pre/post quantum: concrete pre-quantum versus post-quantum cases worth focusing on.
  8. Technicalities: challenges about concrete primitives / threshold schemes / assumptions.
  9. External efforts: other processes developing related reference material or specifications.

[Video]

Presented at

MPTS 2023: NIST Workshop (virtual) on Multi-Party Threshold Schemes 2023

Event Details

Location

    Virtual

Related Topics

Security and Privacy: cryptography

Created September 25, 2023, Updated October 26, 2023