Crooked indifferentiability of the Feistel Construction

Abstract

The Feistel construction is a fundamental technique for building pseudorandom permutations and block ciphers. This paper shows that a simple adaptation of the construction is resistant, even to algorithm substitution attacks -- that is, adversarial subversion -- of the component round functions. Specifically, we establish that a Feistel-based construction with more than 2000n/(1/ε) rounds can transform a subverted random function -- which disagrees with the original one at a small fraction (denoted by ε) of inputs -- into an object that is crooked-indifferentiable from a random permutation, even if the adversary is aware of all the randomness used in the transformation. We also provide a lower bound showing that the construction cannot use fewer than 2n/(1/ε) rounds to achieve crooked-indifferentiable security.

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