Deterministic History-Independent Strategies for Storing Information on Write-Once Memories

Tal Moran       Moni Naor       Gil Segev

Abstract:

Motivated by the challenging task of designing secure vote storage mechanisms, we deal with information storage mechanisms that operate in extremely hostile environments. In such environments, the majority of existing techniques for information storage and for security are susceptible to powerful adversarial attacks. In this setting, we propose a mechanism for storing a set of at most K elements from a large universe of size N on write-once memories (where a 0 can be turned into a 1 but not vice versa)  in a manner that does not reveal the insertion order of the elements. Previously known constructions were either inefficient (required O(K^2) memory), randomized, or employed cryptographic techniques which are unlikely to be available in hostile environments. We eliminate each of these undesirable properties: The total amount of memory used by the mechanism is linear in the number of stored elements K and poly-logarithmic in the size of the universe of elements.

In addition, we consider one of the classical distributed computing problems: conflict resolution in multiple-access channels. By establishing a tight connection with the basic building block of our mechanism, we construct the first deterministic and non-adaptive conflict resolution algorithm whose running time is optimal up to poly-logarithmic factors. 

Paper: Postscript , gzipped Postscript , PDF . Slides: ppt.

 
Related On-Line Papers:

Back to: On-Line PublicationsRecent Papers

Back Home