Secure Multi-Party Computation in Large Networks

Abstract

We describe scalable protocols for solving the secure multi-party computation (MPC) problem among a large number of parties. We consider both the synchronous and the asynchronous communication models. In the synchronous setting, our protocol is secure against a static malicious adversary corrupting less than a 1/3 fraction of the parties. In the asynchronous setting, we allow the adversary to corrupt less than a 1/8 fraction of parties. For any deterministic function that can be computed by an arithmetic circuit with m gates, both of our protocols require each party to send a number of field elements and perform an amount of computation that is O(m/n + n). We also show that our protocols provide perfect and universally-composable security. To achieve our asynchronous MPC result, we define the threshold counting problem and present a distributed protocol to solve it in the asynchronous setting. This protocol is load balanced, with computation, communication and latency complexity of O(n), and can also be used for designing other load-balanced applications in the asynchronous communication model.

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