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General constructions for information-theoretic private information retrieval

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    81 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    A Private Information Retrieval (PIR) protocol enables a user to retrieve a data item from a database while hiding the identity of the item being retrieved; specifically, in a t-private k-server PIR protocol the database is replicated among k servers, and the user's privacy is protected from any collusion of up to t servers. The main cost-measure of such protocols is the communication complexity of retrieving a single bit of data. This work addresses the information-theoretic setting for PIR, where the user's privacy should be unconditionally protected against computationally unbounded servers. We present a general construction, whose abstract components can be instantiated to yield both old and new families of PIR protocols. A main ingredient in the new protocols is a generalization of a solution by Babai, Gál, Kimmel, and Lokam for a communication complexity problem in the multiparty simultaneous messages model. Our protocols simplify and improve upon previous ones, and resolve some previous anomalies. In particular, we get (1) 1-private k-server PIR protocols with O(k3n1/(2k-1)) communication bits, where n is the database size; (2) t-private k-server protocols with O(n1/⌊(2k-1)/t⌋) communication bits, for any constant integers k>t≥1; and (3) t-private k-server protocols in which the user sends O(logn) bits to each server and receives O(nt/k+ε) bits in return, for any constant integers k>t≥1 and constant ε>0. The latter protocols have applications to the construction of efficient families of locally decodable codes over large alphabets and to PIR protocols with reduced work by the servers.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)213-247
    Number of pages35
    JournalJournal of Computer and System Sciences
    Volume71
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    StatePublished - 1 Jan 2005

    Keywords

    • Information-theoretic cryptography
    • Locally decodable codes
    • Multiparty communication complexity
    • Private information retrieval
    • Simultaneous messages protocols

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Theoretical Computer Science
    • Computer Networks and Communications
    • Computational Theory and Mathematics
    • Applied Mathematics

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