Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Sign Up for Fishpond's Best Deals Delivered to You Every Day
Go
Proofs, Arguments, and ­Zero-Knowledge (Foundations ­and Trends
R) in Privacy and Security

Rating
Format
Paperback, 566 pages
Other Formats Available

Paperback : £60.85

Published
United States, 1 December 2022

This monograph is about verifiable computing (VC). VC refers to cryptographic protocols called interactive proofs (IPs) and arguments that enable a prover to provide a guarantee to a verifier that the prover performed a requested computation correctly. This monograph covers different notions of mathematical proofs and their applications in computer science and cryptography. Informally, what we mean by a proof is anything that convinces someone that a statement is true, and a "proof system" is any procedure that decides what is and is not a convincing proof.

Introduced in the 1980s, IPs and arguments represented a major conceptual expansion of what constitutes a "proof" that a statement is true. Traditionally, a proof is a static object that can be easily checked step-by-step for correctness. In contrast, IPs allow for interaction between prover and verifier, as well as a tiny but nonzero probability that an invalid proof passes verification. Arguments (but not IPs) even permit there to be "proofs" of false statements, so long as those "proofs" require exorbitant computational power to find. To an extent, these notions mimic in-person interactions that mathematicians use to convince each other that a claim is true, without going through the painstaking process of writing out and checking a traditional static proof.

Celebrated theoretical results from the 1980s and 1990s, such as IP = PSPACE and MIP = NEXP showed that, in principle, surprisingly complicated statements can be verified efficiently. What is more, any argument can in principle be transformed into one that is zero-knowledge, which means that proofs reveal no information other than their own validity. Zero-knowledge arguments have a myriad of applications in cryptography.

Within the last decade, general-purpose zero-knowledge arguments have made the jump from theory to practice. This has opened new doors in the design of cryptographic systems, and generated additional insights into the power of IPs and arguments (zero-knowledge or otherwise). There are now no fewer than five promising approaches to designing efficient, general-purpose zero-knowledge arguments. This monograph covers these approaches in a unified manner, emphasizing commonalities between them.

Show more

Our Price
£80.94
Elsewhere
£85.00
Save £4.06 (5%)
Ships from Australia Estimated delivery date: 24th Apr - 2nd May from Australia
Free Shipping Worldwide

Buy Together
+
Buy together with Approximate Degree in Classical and Quantum Computing at a great price!
Buy Together
£161.48

Product Description

This monograph is about verifiable computing (VC). VC refers to cryptographic protocols called interactive proofs (IPs) and arguments that enable a prover to provide a guarantee to a verifier that the prover performed a requested computation correctly. This monograph covers different notions of mathematical proofs and their applications in computer science and cryptography. Informally, what we mean by a proof is anything that convinces someone that a statement is true, and a "proof system" is any procedure that decides what is and is not a convincing proof.

Introduced in the 1980s, IPs and arguments represented a major conceptual expansion of what constitutes a "proof" that a statement is true. Traditionally, a proof is a static object that can be easily checked step-by-step for correctness. In contrast, IPs allow for interaction between prover and verifier, as well as a tiny but nonzero probability that an invalid proof passes verification. Arguments (but not IPs) even permit there to be "proofs" of false statements, so long as those "proofs" require exorbitant computational power to find. To an extent, these notions mimic in-person interactions that mathematicians use to convince each other that a claim is true, without going through the painstaking process of writing out and checking a traditional static proof.

Celebrated theoretical results from the 1980s and 1990s, such as IP = PSPACE and MIP = NEXP showed that, in principle, surprisingly complicated statements can be verified efficiently. What is more, any argument can in principle be transformed into one that is zero-knowledge, which means that proofs reveal no information other than their own validity. Zero-knowledge arguments have a myriad of applications in cryptography.

Within the last decade, general-purpose zero-knowledge arguments have made the jump from theory to practice. This has opened new doors in the design of cryptographic systems, and generated additional insights into the power of IPs and arguments (zero-knowledge or otherwise). There are now no fewer than five promising approaches to designing efficient, general-purpose zero-knowledge arguments. This monograph covers these approaches in a unified manner, emphasizing commonalities between them.

Show more
Product Details
EAN
9781638281245
ISBN
1638281246
Dimensions
23.4 x 15.6 x 2.9 centimeters (0.90 kg)

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. The Power of Randomness: Fingerprinting and Freivalds’ Algorithm
  • 3. Definitions and Technical Preliminaries
  • 4. Interactive Proofs
  • 5. Publicly Verifiable, Non-Interactive Arguments via Fiat-Shamir
  • 6. Front Ends: Turning Computer Programs Into Circuits
  • 7. A First Succinct Argument for Circuit Satisfiability, from Interactive Proofs
  • 8. MIPs and Succinct Arguments
  • 9. PCPs and Succinct Arguments
  • 10. Interactive Oracle Proofs
  • 11. Zero-Knowledge Proofs and Arguments
  • 12. ∑-Protocols and Commitments from Hardness of Discrete Logarithm
  • 13. Zero-Knowledge via Commit-And-Prove and Masking Polynomials
  • 14. Polynomial Commitments from Hardness of Discrete Logarithm
  • 15. Polynomial Commitments from Pairings
  • 16. Wrap-Up of Polynomial Commitments
  • 17. Linear PCPs and Succinct Arguments
  • 18. SNARK Composition and Recursion
  • 19. Bird’s Eye View of Practical Arguments
  • Acknowledgements
  • References

Show more
Review this Product
Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
Home » Books » Computers » Security » Networking
Item ships from and is sold by Fishpond Retail Limited.

Back to top
We use essential and some optional cookies to provide you the best shopping experience. Visit our cookies policy page for more information.