This present invention relates to systems and methods for cryptography, and in particular, to systems and methods for implementing a secret sharing scheme for secure mass medium storage.
In today's world, information and audio-visual content is transmitted over various mediums by a multitude of content providers. The mediums include standard over-the-air broadcasts systems, cable broadcast systems, satellite broadcast systems, and the Internet. Moreover, the sensitive financial information demands for secure and reliable storages and transmission.
Cryptography systems permit the protection of information and content which is sensitive, or intended only for a select audience. For example, a provider of satellite radio broadcasts may encrypt its transmission so that only authorized receivers may play the transmitted content.
One existing cryptography system which utilizes a technique known as ‘secret sharing’ is referenced as ‘threshold cryptography.’ A (k, n) threshold secret sharing scheme is one type of secret sharing system. A ‘secret sharing’ technique, developed by Adi Shamir, discusses the (k, n) threshold secret sharing technique using a polynomial function of the (k−1)th power to construct ‘n’ shares from a shared secret value. The technique satisfies following the two information entropy requirements: i) any ‘k’ or more shares can be used to reconstruct the secret, and ii) any k−1 or less shares could not reveal any information about the secret (See, E. D. Kamin, J. W. Greene, and M. E. Hellman, “On secret sharing systems,” IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, vol. IT-29, no. 1, pp. 35-41, January 1983; A. Shamir, “How to share a secret,” Communications of the ACM, Vo. 22, No. 11, pp. 612-613, November 1979). Threshold cryptography uses the secret sharing technique to divide an encryption key into ‘n’ shares, such that any ‘k’ shares can be used to reconstruct the key.
Van Dijk et al. and Jackson et. al. have proposed extending the ‘secret sharing’ concept to share multiple secret(s) by using linear coding (See M. Van Dijk, “A linear construction of perfect secret sharing schemes”, in Advances in Cryptology—(EUROCRYPT '94): Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cryptographic Techniques Advances in Cryptology, A. De Santis, Ed., IACR. Perugia, Italy: Springer-Verlag, May 1994, pp. 23-35; W. A. Jackson and K. M. Martin, “Geometric secret sharing schemes and their duals”, Designs, Codes and Cryptography, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 83-95, January 1994).
However, existing methods and systems for sharing multiple secrets suffer from large information overhead requirements.
Thus, there is presently a need for a system and method for sharing multiple secrets which has low information overhead, but yet maintains a high level of security.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention comprises a method for sharing a secret including the steps of generating at least one first random matrix, generating at least one first projection matrix from the at least one first random matrix, and determining at least one first remainder matrix from the at least one first projection matrix and at least one first secret matrix.
Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention comprises a conditional access system including a transmitter for transmitting at least one encrypted signal, and a receiver for receiving the at least one encrypted signal, and including K vector shares, wherein the receiver can utilize the K vector shares to decrypt the at least one encrypted signal.
Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention comprises a computer system including at least one server computer and, at least one user computer coupled to the at least one server through a network, wherein the at least one server computer includes at least one program stored therein, said program performing the steps of generating at least one first random matrix, generating at least one first projection matrix from the at least one first random matrix, and determining at least one first remainder matrix from the at least one first projection matrix and at least one first secret matrix.
Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention comprises a computer readable medium having embodied thereon a computer program for processing by a machine, the computer program including a first code segment for generating at least one first random matrix, a second code segment for generating at least one first projection matrix from the at least one first random matrix, and a third code segment for determining at least one first remainder matrix from the at least one first projection matrix and at least one first secret matrix.
Another exemplary embodiment of the present invention comprises a computer data signal embodied in a carrier including a first code segment for generating at least one first random matrix, a second code segment for generating at least one first projection matrix from the at least one first random matrix, and a third code segment for determining at least one first remainder matrix from the at least one first projection matrix and at least one first secret matrix.
The present invention comprises, in one exemplary embodiment, a system and method for sharing multiple secrets which utilizes a matrix projection technique. The present method satisfies information entropy properties to protect the secret values, but it has the additional advantage of reducing the information overhead required to store and transmit secret shares.
The present system and method may also be extended to image secret sharing applications due to the low overhead requirement for information content. The image secret sharing system and method can also provide the benefits of: 1) smaller size for image shares as compared to the size of the secret image, 2) nearly lossless reconstruction of the secret image, and 3) image secret sharing for all image types (e.g., black and white images, gray images and colored, images).
As noted above, Shamir developed the idea of a (k, n) threshold secret sharing technique. (See, A. Shamir, “How to share a secret”, Communications of the ACM, vol. 22, no. 11, pp. 612-613, November 1979. and G. Blakley, “Safeguarding cryptographic keys”, presented at the Proceedings of the AFIPS 1979 National Computer Conference, vol. 48, Arlington, Va., June 1997, pp. 313-317). The general idea behind ‘secret sharing’ is to distribute a secret (e.g., encryption/decryption key) to ‘n’ different participants so that any ‘k’ participants can reconstruct the secret, and so that any k−1 or fewer participants can not reveal anything about the secret. These requirements are also the basis for ‘perfect’ secret sharing in terms of information entropy (See, E. D. Kamin, J. W. Greene, and M. E. Hellman, “On secret sharing systems”, IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, vol. IT-29, no. 1, pp. 35-41, January 1983).
The ‘secret sharing’ concept was further extended as a generalized secret sharing technique by Ito et. al. (See, M. Ito, A. Saito, and T. Nishizeki, “Secret sharing scheme realizing general access structure”, in Proc. IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference (Globecom'87), Tokyo, Japan, January 1987, pp. 99-102.). The secret, K is distributed among a set of ‘n’ participants ={P1 P2 . . . Pn} so that only the qualified subsets of can reconstruct the secret(s). These qualified subsets, denoted as rare called the “access structure” of the secret sharing scheme. In a perfect secret sharing scheme, any subset of participants that is not in Γ cannot obtain any information about the secret(s). The number of participants in each subset of Γ is not necessarily the same. For example, in a set of 4 participants ={P1, P2, P3, P4}, a generalized secret sharing scheme may have an access structure Γ={{P1, P2}, {P2, P3, P4}}. Here, the first subset has two participants while the second subset can have three participants. For a (3, 4) threshold secret sharing scheme, the access structure Γ={{P1, P2, P3,}, {P1, P3, P4}, {P2, P3, P4}, {P1, P2, P4})}. In each qualified subset, the number of participants is 3. The (k, n) threshold secret sharing scheme is a specialized generalized secret sharing technique.
The perfect secret sharing scheme is defined using information entropy as,
1) any qualified subset, Y can construct the secret(s), K:
∀γeΓH(K|Y)=0, and
2) any unqualified subset, Y has no information about the secret(s), K:
∀γ∉ΓH(K|Y)=H(K).
Benaloh et al. proposed a generalized perfect secret sharing technique based upon a monotone circuit design (See, G. Blakley, “Safeguarding cryptographic keys”, presented at the Proceedings of the AFIPS 1979 National Computer Conference, vol. 48, Arlington, Va., June 1997, pp. 313-317.). Brickell extended secret sharing schemes further (See, E. F. Brickell, “Some ideal secret sharing schemes”, in Advances in Cryptology—(EUROCRYPT '89): Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cryptographic Techniques Advances in Cryptology, J.-J. Quisquater and J. Vandewalle, Eds., IACR. Houthalen, Belgium). He showed necessary but not sufficient conditions to construct multiple-secret sharing schemes, and also introduced compartment secret sharing. Compartment secret sharing allows multiple groups to collaborate together with different thresholds to obtain the secret. Jackson et al. described a multiple-secret sharing scheme using a geometrical approach (See, [JAC94]). Van Dijk established a connection between multiple-secrets sharing and linear codes in vector space construction (See, M. Van Dijk, “A linear construction of perfect secret sharing schemes”, in Advances in Cryptology—(EUROCRYPT '94): Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cryptographic Techniques Advances in Cryptology, A. De Santis, Ed., IACR. Perugia, Italy: Springer-Verlag, May 1994, pp. 23-35). These multiple-secret sharing techniques are often categorized as Linear Secret Sharing Schemes (LSSS).
There are at least two approaches to measure efficiency of secret sharing schemes (See, H. M. Sun and S. P. Shieh, “Constructing perfect secret sharing schemes for general and uniform access structures”, Journal of Information Science and Engineering, vol. 15, pp. 679-689, October 1999). These two approaches are: i) the Information Rate, and ii) the Dealer's Randomness Coefficient (See, C. Blundo, A. De Santis, A. G. Gaggia, and U. Vaccaro, “New bounds on the information rate of secret sharing schemes”, IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, vol. 41, no. 2, pp. 549-554, March 1995; F. Brickell and D. M. Davenport, “On the classification of ideal secret sharing schemes”, in Advances in Cryptology—(CRYPT '89), G. Brassard, Ed., IACR. Springer-Verlag, 1989, pp. 278-285; C. Blundo, A. G. Gaggia, and D. R. Stinson, “On the dealer's randomness required in secret sharing schemes”, in Advances in Cryptology—(EUROCRYPT '94): Workshop on the Theory and Application of Cryptographic Techniques Advances in Cryptology, A. De Santis, Ed., IACR. Perugia, Italy: Springer-Verlag, May 1994, pp. 35-46; A. De Santis and B. Masucci, “Multiple ramp schemes”, IEEE Trans. Informs. Theory, vol. 45, no. 5, pp. 1720-1728, July 1999).
The Information Rate, ρ, is the rate between the length (in bits) of the secret(s) and the maximum length of the shares of the participants:
where K is the set of all possible secrets for a secret sharing scheme, and S(Pi) is the set of all possible shares for the ith participant piε.
The size of the shares given to the participants is an important measure in the design of a secret sharing scheme. If the shares are too large, the memory requirements used to compute the secret will become inefficient. Therefore, an ideal secret sharing is defined as a perfect secret sharing with Information Rate ρ (Σ, Γ, K)=1 (See, E. F. Brickell and D. M. Davenport, “On the classification of ideal secret sharing schemes”, in Advances in Cryptology—(CRYPT '89), G. Brassard, Ed., IACR. Springer-Verlag, 1989, pp. 278-285).
The second measure is the Dealer's Randomness Coefficient, μ. It represents the amount of randomness per bit of the secret(s) required by dealer to set up the scheme (See, [BLU94]), and may be expressed as:
where ΠK is the probability distribution on the secrets K. The dealer often is interested in the minimum possible amount of randomness to set up a secret sharing scheme Σ for a given access structure Γ. The drawback of perfect secret sharing schemes is the overhead because they cannot allow the size of secret shares to become smaller than the size of the secret. There is another type of schemes permit an unqualified group to obtain partial information on the secret(s), but not sufficiently to solve the secret(s). The schemes allow the size of the secret shares to be smaller than the size of the secret. When exposed information is proportional to the size of unqualified group, these types of secret sharing schemes are regarded as ramp secret sharing schemes (see, A. De Santis and B. Masucci, “Multiple ramp schemes,” IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory, vol. 45, no. 5, pp. 1720-1728, July 1999; H. Yamamoto, “On secret sharing systems using (k, l, n) threshold scheme,” Electronics and Communications in Japan, Part I, vol. 69, no. 9, pp. 46-54, 1986.). This invention is classified as a strong ramp secret sharing scheme which reduces the size of the shares while maintains strong security measures.
The multiple-secret sharing technique has been used in image secret sharing by Naor and Shamir (See, M. Naor and A. Shamir, “Visual cryptography”, presented at the Proceedings of the Conference on Advances in Cryptology—Eurocrypt '94, A. De Santis, Ed., Berlin, Germany, 1994, pp. 1-12). Although the technical detail is quite different than multiple secret(s) sharing discussed above, the image secret sharing method proposed the simple idea to stack any k image shares to show the original image. It has been also referred as visual cryptography or visual secret sharing because the method does not involve much cryptographic computation, rather just binary or operations.
This image secret sharing method was introduced as a (2, 2) threshold image secret sharing technique for a black and white image. Ateniese et al. developed a (k, n) threshold image secret sharing technique (See, G. Ateniese, C. Blundo, A. De Santis, and D. R. Stinson, “Visual cryptography for general access structures”, Information and Computation, vol. 129, no. 2, pp. 86-106, 1996). However, there are several obstacles for the (k, n) threshold image secret sharing technique. Various researchers devoted significant amounts of efforts on these challenges, which include: i) colored image extension, and ii) optimal image contrast rate (See, R. Lukac and K. N. Plataniotis, “Colour image secret sharing”, Electronics Letters, vol. 40, no. 9, pp. 529-531, April 2004, M. Naor and A. Shair. (1996, June) Visual cryptography II: Improving the contrast via the cover base. [Online] Available: http://philby.ucsd.edu/cryptolib/1996/96-07.html. Last accessed: March 2005, C. N. Yang, “A note on efficient color visual encryption”, Journal of Information Science and Engineering, vol. 18, pp. 367-372, 2002; C. Blundo, A. De Santis, and D. R. Stinson, “On the contrast in visual cryptography schemes”, Journal of Cryptology, vol. 12, pp. 261-289, 1999, C. Kuhlmann and H. U. Simon, “Construction of visual secret sharing schemes with almost optimal contrast”, presented at the Proceedings of the eleventh annual ACM-SIAM symposium on discrete algorithms, D. Shmoys, Ed., San Francisco, Calif., United States, Jan. 2000, pp. 263-272., M. Naor and A. Shair. (1996, June) Visual cryptography II: Improving the contrast via the cover base. [Online] Available: http://philby.ucsd.edu/cryptolib/1996/96-07.html. Last accessed: March 2005).
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention deals with a matrix projection technique for secret sharing according to the (k, n) method, and its application in data secret sharing and image secret sharing. The shares ‘n’ are distributed as vectors (as opposed to values with a specified bit length), such that any ‘k’ vectors chosen from these shares have the same projection matrix. Since the secrets are represented in a matrix, it can potentially reduce the size of secret shares. When the matrix projection secret sharing technique is applied to image sharing, the size of image shares becomes much smaller than the size of the original image. Moreover, the transmission bandwidth required to transmit these shares is much smaller compared to the above-described image secret sharing methods.
Next, it will briefly be described how a matrix projection is defined. Additionally, it will be shown that a matrix projection is invariant under a similarity transformation, and possesses certain unique properties.
Matrix Projection
First, a matrix projection must be defined through a simple example. For example, let matrix A be an m×k matrix of rank k (k≦m), and projection matrix of A be denoted as . The projection matrix is defined as:
=A(A′A)−1A′,
where (·)′ is the transpose of a matrix. We can also write =proj(A).
For example, consider a 3×2 matrix A as follows:
we can calculate as a 3×3 matrix using the definition as:
It will be noted that the above matrix projection is invariant under similarity transformation.
If B is a similarity transformation matrix of A, such that B=AX where X is a k×k nonsingular matrix, we can show that [Lemma 2.1].
=B(B′B)−1B′=AX((AX)′AX)′(AX)′=AXX−1(A′A)(X′)−1X′.
Since X is a k×k nonsingular matrix, XX−1 and (X′)−1X′ are identity matrices. can be simplified further as:
=A(A′A)−1A′=
Take an example for a matrix X as a 2×2 matrix such that:
We can calculate matrix B as:
One can verify that:
If there are any k linearly independent vectors xis with dimension of k, we can compute the set of vectors vi as:
vi=Axi,
where 1≦i≦k. These k vectors vi can construct a matrix B as:
B=[v1 v2 . . . vk].
We can show
Thus, we can choose an m×k dimensional matrix A of rank k (k≦m), and a set of k linearly independent vectors xi where 1≦i≦k [Theorem 2.1]. We can construct a matrix B using k vectors vi where vi=A xi as B=[v1 v2 . . . vk]. The projection matrices satisfy:
Let X=[x1 x2 . . . xk] where X is a full rank k×k matrix because X has k linearly independent vectors xis. We can write B=AX. From the Lemma 2.1 result, we have
The projection matrix is invariant under similarity transformation from matrix A to another matrix B. There are also some important properties that a projection matrix possesses. They are:
1) is symmetric,
2) ×A=A,
3) is idempotent, i.e. and
4) tr =rank=k, where tr is the trace for matrix =(hij) that
Properties (1)-(3) above can be easily shown through matrix manipulation. Property (4) is an important property for an idempotent matrix; it is useful and simple to validate whether the obtained projection matrix is correct.
An idempotent matrix D can only have Zeros (0s) and Ones (1s) as the Eigenvalues [Lemma 2.2].
Proof: For an idempotent matrix D and its Eigenvalues are λs, we have:
Dx=λxD2x=Dλx
Since D is an idempotent matrix that D2=D, it can show that Dx=λDx or, we can simplify it as λx=λλx. In other words, we have (λ2−λ)x=0. This condition has to be hold for nonzero x which implies that:
λ2−λ=0, or λ=0, 1.
For an idempotent matrix D, tr (D)=rank (D)[Lemma 2.3]
Proof. The idempotent matrix H has a diagonal similarity matrix Λ such that:
D=TΛT−1,
where T is Eigenvector matrix and Λ is the Eigenvalue matrix. Since D and Λ are similarity matrices, we know that:
rank(D)=rank(Λ),
and
tr(D)=tr(A).
Also stated in Lemma 2, the idempotent matrix D has Eigenvalues as 0s or 1s. A must have Eigenvalues of 0s and 1s on its diagonal:
tr(Λ)=rank(Λ).
tr(D)=rank(D).
Let an m×k dimensional matrix A of rank k(k≦m), tr=k where =proj (A) [Theorem 2.2].
Proof: Since rank(A)=k, we have that rank(AXX)=k and rank((A′A)−1)=k.
If M=(A′A)−1, we can find rank (A×M) as:
rank(A)+rank(M)−min(m,k)≦rank(A×M)−min(rank(A),rank(M)).
Clearly, it is simplified as:
k+k−k≦rank(A×M)≦min(k;k), or rank(A×M)=k.
Now, =proj(A)=A×M×A′:
rank(A×M)+rank(A′)−min(m;k)≦rank(A×M×A′)≦min(rank(A×M),rank(A′))
k+k−k≦rank(A×M×A′)≦min(k,k), or k≦rank≦k.
It shows that rank=k. Since is an idempotent matrix and tr=rank we have proved that:
tr=k
Next secret sharing using matrix projection will be discussed. The idea is to use matrix projection invariance properties under similarity transform. First, Shamir's polynomial secret sharing technique will be discussed.
Matrix Projection Secret Sharing
As discussed above, Shamir demonstrated a (k, n) threshold secret sharing technique for k≦n using the (k−1)th polynomial function (See, A. Shamir, “How to share a secret”, Communications of the ACM, vol. 22, no. 11, pp. 612-613, November 1979). To share a secret value d0εZ, a (k−1)th polynomial function f(x) can be written using some random coefficients diεZ for 1≦i≦k−1 as:
f(x)=d0+d1x+ . . . +dk−1xk−1 mod p,
where pεZ is a prime modulus number. To distribute ‘n’ shares to ‘n’ different participants, a distribution center can calculate ‘n’ pairs of values (xi, yi) where yi=f(xi) for ‘n’ distinct values where xiεZp. The variable d0 may be determined with any k shares using Lagrange formulation as:
For example, consider a secret value d0=5 and we want to have (2, 4) secret sharing for p=19. The polynomial function f(x) can be written as:
f(x)=5+3x mod 19,
where d1 is chosen as 3.
If we randomly pick some values for x1=3, x2=5, x3=7, x4=10, we can calculate these four shares as (3, 14), (5, 1), (7, 7), (10, 16). For any k−1 shares or less, there is no knowledge about the secret value d0. For any k shares or more, one can determine the value of d0 using the Lagrange formulation as stated above. The size of the secret is same as the size of the share.
Modular arithmetic is important for cryptography, and it is equally important for the secret sharing techniques. To use matrix projection in secret sharing, we have to first derive some matrix modular arithmetic.
In modular arithmetic, an integer r can have an inverse, r−1 such that r×r−1 (mod p)=1. If p is a prime number, Fermat's theorem states that r−1 (mod p) a rp−2 (mod p). For example,
4−1(mod 19)=419−2(mod 19)=5(mod 19).
Euclid's algorithm can also be used to compute r−1 (mod p) if p is not a prime number, but r and p must be co-prime to each other or gcd(r, p)=1 (See, [SEB89]).
We are interested in how to compute matrix inverse in modular operation because there is a matrix inverse operation in matrix projection formula (as discussed above). Hill substitution ciphers also used the modular matrix inversion to compute the decryption key matrix (See, D. R. Stinson, Cryptography: Theory and Practice, 2nd edition. Chapman & Hall/CRC, 2002, ch. 1.2.4, pp. 34-36). Fortunately, the modular arithmetic for matrix operation can be also extended as the same as the mathematic operation in the matrix theory.
The square matrix M has an inverse M−1 if det(M)≠0. In modular computation, a square matrix can also have an modular inverse, M−1 (mod p) if mod(det(M), p)≠0. The remainder of the discussion with regard to the present invention will be restricted following two conditions:
1) p is a prime number, and
2) mod(det(M), p)≠0.
M−1 (mod p) can be computed as:
M
−1(mod p)=[(det(M))−1(mod p)×adj(M)](mod p),
where adj(M) is adjoint matrix for M.
Let p=19 and a 2×2 matrix M that:
We can calculate that det(M)=−29, or det(M) (mod 19)=9. It can be found that 9−1 (mod 19)=17 and adj(M) as:
As shown in Theorem 2.1 above, we require that these k vectors xis for 1≦i≦k are linearly independent so that the projection matrix is invariant under similarity transformation. In the (k, n) matrix secret sharing technique according to the present invention, this requirement becomes very important to determine whether a modular matrix inverse exists. Migler et. al. showed that there were many linearly independent random matrices or vectors in the finite field with a fixed rank (see T. Migler, K. E. Morrison, and M. Ogle. “Weight and rank of matrices over finite fields”, Sep. 29, 2003, [Online] Available: http://www.calpoly.edu/˜kmorriso/Research/weight.pdf. Last accessed: March 2006). Specifically, the number of random m×k matrices of rank k (availability of matrix A) is (pm−1)(pm−p) . . . (pm−pk−1), and the number of k linearly independent random vector of dimension k×1 is (pk−1)(pk−pk−1) . . . (pk−pk−1) (availability of vector xis, or possible number of participants allowed). It suggests that we can construct many modular matrices with inverse.
Since we cannot use (k−1) shares to solve any secrets in we have to restrict another condition to satisfy this requirement. Consider that we know (k−1) vectors vis, we also have vi=A(A′A)−1A′A xi=vi, and tr=k and matrix is symmetric. It is clear that one can set up (k−1)m simultaneous equations to solve m(m+1)/2−1 values in matrix . To prevent it, we need ensure (k−1)m<m(m+1)/2−1. Therefore, another requirement in present secret sharing scheme is m>2(k−1)−1.
Next, secret sharing using matrix projection according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be described. The secret(s) are stored into a square matrix with dimension of m×1. The secret sharing scheme according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention will be explained with respect to: i) share construction and ii) secret reconstruction.
To secretly share a matrix we must first choose a prime number ‘p.’ The value of this prime number directly determines the secrecy of the system. In particular, since the prime number is used in a modulus (mod) computation (as discussed below), the larger the prime number, the more difficult the secret matrix is to determine. Our (k, n) matrix projection sharing scheme is described as in following steps:
1) Construct an m×k matrix A of rank k (m>2(k−1)−1),
2) Compute =A(A′A)−1A′ (mod p),
3) Randomly choose n distinct values for ai and construct n vectors xi as:
xi=[1 ai . . . aik−1]′(mod p),
4) Calculate the ith participants share vi as vi=A xi (mod p) for 1≦i≦n,
5) Determine the remainder matrix (mod p), and make it public,
6) Destroy matrix A, and n vectors xis,
7) Distribute these n shares vi to n different participants in
For k−1 or less shares, the projection matrix could not be computed due to lack of full dimensionality. Therefore, the secret matrix could not be found. If there are k or more vector shares vi, we can determine the secret matrix as follows.
Let these vector shares be v1, v2, . . . , vk, the secret matrix will be determined as follows:
1) Construct a matrix B as B=[v1 v2 . . . vk], where the order of vi is not important.
2) Compute =B(B′B)−1 B′ (mod p) and verify tr=k, and
3) since we know that it can easily find the secret matrix s,
+(mod p).
For example, consider a simple (2, 4) matrix secret sharing scheme to demonstrate the technique. Let p=19 and the secret (3×3) matrix as:
To construct the secret shares, we pick a random (3×2) matrix A that,
We can compute =A(A′A)−1A′ (mod p) as
and choose four (4) values, such that a1=17, a2=7, a3=9 and a4=10. Then we can construct three four (4) vectors xis as:
Next we compute vector shares vi=A×xi (mod 19) for i=1, 2, 3 and 4 as:
and calculate as,
The remainder matrix is made as public information. We can destroy A, xis, and then we distribute the four (4) vector shares vis to four (4) different participants. Any individual participant could not reveal the secret matrix with knowledge of remainder matrix and his or her own share.
To compute the secret matrix any two (2) shares are needed, along with the remainder matrix . For example, let these two shares be v1 and v4, then we can construct a matrix B as,
The projection matrix =B(B′B)−1B′ (mod p) can be computed as,
and tr(mod 19)=2. The result is exactly the same value as k. The secret matrix can be reconstructed using and as,
This result is the same as the original secret matrix Accordingly, we have developed a secure secret sharing technique using matrix projection. The size of the secrets is larger than the size of each share. In terms of overhead cost, we can also compute for Shamir's method and our method using the examples for our (2, 4) schemes. In Shamir's method, there are 4 share values over 1 secret value. The overhead cost is:
The possible number of participants in Shamir's scheme is p−1, or 18 participants for modulus of 19 in this case.
For our matrix projection secret sharing technique, there are four (4) vector shares v; with 3 elements in each share (vector), over nine (9) secret values (in the 3×3 secret matrix . If we also add the remainder matrix of nine (9) secret values, the overhead cost is:
Clearly, the secret sharing technique of the present invention saves much overhead cost. In addition, the possible number of participants in our technique is (pk−1)(pk−p) . . . (pk−pk−1) or 123,120 participants when k=2 for modulus of 19. We can see that this invention allows larger number of participants to share more secrets.
Next, we will extend the above-described exemplary secret sharing technique into some important applications such as image secret sharing. Image secret sharing has been described by Naor and Shamir, and was called visual secret sharing (See, M. Naor and A. Shamir, “Visual cryptography”, presented at the Proceedings of the Conference on Advances in Cryptology—Eurocrypt '94, A. De Santis, Ed., Berlin, Germany, 1994, pp. 1-12, M. Naor and A. Shair. (1996, June) Visual cryptography II: Improving the contrast via the cover base. [Online] Available: http://philby.ucsd.edu/cryptolib/1996/96-07.html. Last accessed: March 2005). Image secret sharing is often used to protect a secret image from unauthorized access, but it also increases reliability to prevent image damage due to corrupted pixels for an unreliable transmission (such as unreliable satellite transmission).
Matrix Projection Image Secret Sharing
In a (k, n) image secret sharing scheme, an image is split into ‘n’ shares such that: i) any k or more image shares can be used to reconstruct the image, and ii) any k−1 or less image shares do not reveal any information about the secret image. The technique of Naor and Shamir was proposed for black and white images. Their first scheme is a (2, 2) that:
However, the reconstructed image loses its contrast in resolution and is sometimes distorted. In addition, the sizes of the shares are twice as larger as the original image. Overall, the storage for image shares is 4 times larger than the size of the secret image. Ateniese extended the technique as (k, n) image secret sharing (See, G. Ateniese, C. Blundo, A. De Santis, and D. R. Stinson, “Visual cryptography for general access structures”, Information and Computation, vol. 129, no. 2, pp. 86-106, 1996). The challenge remains for various researchers to extend their technique for grey images and colored images, but the loss of contrast for the reconstructed image prevents the original image from being fully rebuilt (See, R. Lukac and K. N. Plataniotis, “Colour image secret sharing”, Electronics Letters, vol. 40, no. 9, pp. 529-531, April 2004, M. Naor and A. Shair. (1996, June) Visual cryptography II: Improving the contrast via the cover base. [Online] Available: http://philby.ucsd.edu/cryptolib/1996/96-07.html. Last accessed: March 2005, C. N. Yang, “A note on efficient color visual encryption”, Journal of Information Science and Engineering, vol. 18, pp. 367-372, 2002).
The present inventor describes an approach which involves splitting a colored image into ‘n’ shares using the matrix projection secret sharing technique described above. The idea is to think of an image of m×m pixels as a secret matrix We can construct an m×k matrix A and its projection matrix Each share is a vector vi=Axi (mod p) with dimension as m×1 or with m pixels for 1≦i≦n and xis are k×1 vectors constructed from Vandermore matrix. In addition, the remainder matrix (mod p) is also computed.
When the image is needed, any k vectors vis are combined into an m×k matrix B as B=[v1 v2 . . . vk]. The secret image will be constructed as the secret matrix which can be computed as (mod p). In this approach, there is nearly lossless in contrast in the reconstructed image, and each image share is m times smaller than the original secret image.
There are at lest two challenges for the image secret sharing using the matrix projection secret sharing:
The first challenge is easy to address where each share will also have three (3) layers (red, green, and blue intensities) as secret sharing red pixels in red shares, green pixels in green shares, and blue pixels in blue shares.
To address pixel intensity, denote Ω as the maximum possible pixel intensity level (e.g., 255), then choose ‘p’ as the largest prime number close to Ω. For example in an 8-bit resolution image, we have 2=255 and Ω=233. However, it will produce two remainder matrices: one for remainder matrix which contains the pixel values larger than p=233, and one for remainder matrix which is computed from the calculation in the secret sharing using matrix projection.
We can combine these two remainder m×m matrices into a single m×m matrix. Let us first denote the original image matrix as (gij) where 1≦i, j≦m and 0≦gij≦Ω, the secret matrix as (dij) where 0≦dij≦p, the difference matrix (rij)= that:
This ensures that the secret matrix can be used for the modular matrix projection manipulation.
To secret share a matrix we have another remainder matrix =(oij) where 1≦i, j≦m. Here, we do not want to store two remainder matrices and and we can combine these two matrices into one matrix (qij) as follows:
where EF is even floor function and OF is odd floor function.
When the image is reconstructed, we can use k vectors vis to calculate projection matrix Most importantly, we will need to built two remainder matrices from (qij) back to two remainder matrices and The remainder matrix =(rij) can be constructed as follows,
other remainder matrix =(oij) as follows,
The original image can be reconstructed as
(mod p)+
Clearly, this method will ensure that each secret share could not reveal the original image. For a large image, we will use an m×m window and split the whole image into smaller image for image secret sharing. Also, since an image can be partitioned into smaller blocks of matrix, the present invention allow possibilities of real time processing and transmission errors in some image blocks.
We have built simple demonstration software to secret share an “Air Force” image, as shown in
In
The shares are shown in the lower right in
In
This technique, if implemented in satellite communication networks (satellite transmitter to satellite receiver) or client-multiple server based architectures (e.g., where the shares are stored on multiple servers, but the client does not know which servers, and utilizes a mobile agent to retrieve the shares), can dramatically change transmission security of secret images. The following benefits are easily shown:
In sum, the present invention comprises a (k, n) secret sharing scheme using matrix projection, which may be used in (k, n) colored image secret sharing. Any k vector shares lie in the same projection matrix where they can commonly share the same projection matrix. Since the projection matrix is a symmetric matrix, the secret matrix is the sum of the projection matrix and the remainder matrix (which is public information). However, the (public) remainder matrix does not reveal the secret matrix when the projection matrix is unknown.
When the present matrix projection secret sharing (k, n) method is used in satellite transmission to protect information, a satellite transmitter may provide an encrypted information signal (e.g., secret matrix on ‘n’ separate channels to a satellite receiver, and a remainder matrix may be made publicly available. In one exemplary embodiment, the satellite receiver would include any ‘k’ of the ‘n’ vector shares (vi), and would utilizes such vector shares and the publicly available remainder matrix to derive the secret matrix Alternatively, the satellite receiver may include k−1 vector shares, and the kth vector share may be provided with the encrypted information, such that the combination of vector shares present at the receiver and the remainder matrix will permit generation of the secret matrix at the receiver.
The present matrix projection secret sharing technique can also be used by bank or credit companies to store their valuable information in a secure and reliable manner. This information can thus be efficiently stored in a less compact form.
The present matrix projection secret sharing technique can also be extended into audio, video and audio-visual secret sharing. The music and video industries can use it to protect their property rights and trace the origin of illegal distribution. It can also be used to prevent illegal file sharing systems online. For example, in a music file sharing system, each participant P may be provided a unique set of vector shares (vi), such that each user's projection matrix is unique. In this manner, if a user attempts to use a project matrix not assigned to that user to decode music files or other content, the content will not be effectively decoded.
Although the invention has been described in terms of exemplary embodiments, it is not limited thereto. Rather, the appended claims should be construed broadly to include other variants and embodiments of the invention which may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and range of equivalents of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US06/16952 | 5/3/2006 | WO | 00 | 11/18/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60680611 | May 2005 | US |