21787 articles – 15600 references  [version française]
HAL: inria-00614487, version 1

See detailed view  BibTeX,EndNote,...
WCC 2011 - Workshop on coding and cryptography, Paris : France (2011)
An Analysis of the Naor-Naor-Lotspiech Subset Difference Algorithm (For Possibly Incomplete Binary Trees)
Sanjay Bhattacherjee 1, Palash Sarkar 1
(2011-04)

The Subset Difference (SD) method is the most popular of Broadcast Encryption schemes due to its use in AACS standard for video discs. The scheme assumes the number of users n to be a power of two. In this paper, we relax this and consider arbitrary values of n. In some applications, this leads to substantial savings in the transmission overhead. Our analysis consists of the following aspects: (1) A recurrence to count N (n, r, h) - the number of revocation patterns for arbitrary values of n and r (number of revoked users) resulting in a header length of h. The recurrence allows us to generate data and hence to completely analyze it for larger n than the brute force method. (2) We do a probabilistic analysis of the subset cover finding algorithm of the SD method and find an expression to evaluate the expected header length E[Xn;r] for arbitrary values of n and r. Using this, E[Xn;r] can be evaluated in O(r log n) time using constant space. (3) While concluding, we suggest a similar method for finding E[Xn;r] for the Layered Subset Difference (LSD) scheme of Halevy and Shamir. (4) In the SD method, for n being a power two, we find asymptotic values of the expected header length.
1:  Applied Statistics Unit
Indian Statistical Institute
Computer Science/Cryptography and Security

Computer Science/Discrete Mathematics

Computer Science/Information Theory and Coding

Mathematics/Information Theory
Broadcast encryption – subset di erence – recurrence – expected header length – asymptotic analysis – layered subset diff erence
Attached file list to this document: 
PDF
80.pdf(209.4 KB)