{"doi":"10.1007/978-3-031-38545-2_17","page":"514-546","author":[{"last_name":"Dodis","first_name":"Yevgeniy","full_name":"Dodis, Yevgeniy"},{"full_name":"Ferguson, Niels","first_name":"Niels","last_name":"Ferguson"},{"full_name":"Goldin, Eli","last_name":"Goldin","first_name":"Eli"},{"first_name":"Peter","last_name":"Hall","full_name":"Hall, Peter"},{"orcid":"0000-0002-9139-1654","last_name":"Pietrzak","first_name":"Krzysztof Z","id":"3E04A7AA-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","full_name":"Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z"}],"publication":"43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0302-9743"],"eissn":["1611-3349"],"isbn":["9783031385445"]},"conference":{"location":"Santa Barbara, CA, United States","end_date":"2023-08-24","start_date":"2023-08-20","name":"CRYPTO: Advances in Cryptology"},"citation":{"mla":"Dodis, Yevgeniy, et al. “Random Oracle Combiners: Breaking the Concatenation Barrier for Collision-Resistance.” 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference, vol. 14082, Springer Nature, 2023, pp. 514–46, doi:10.1007/978-3-031-38545-2_17.","ieee":"Y. Dodis, N. Ferguson, E. Goldin, P. Hall, and K. Z. Pietrzak, “Random oracle combiners: Breaking the concatenation barrier for collision-resistance,” in 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference, Santa Barbara, CA, United States, 2023, vol. 14082, pp. 514–546.","ista":"Dodis Y, Ferguson N, Goldin E, Hall P, Pietrzak KZ. 2023. Random oracle combiners: Breaking the concatenation barrier for collision-resistance. 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference. CRYPTO: Advances in Cryptology, LNCS, vol. 14082, 514–546.","apa":"Dodis, Y., Ferguson, N., Goldin, E., Hall, P., & Pietrzak, K. Z. (2023). Random oracle combiners: Breaking the concatenation barrier for collision-resistance. In 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference (Vol. 14082, pp. 514–546). Santa Barbara, CA, United States: Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-38545-2_17","chicago":"Dodis, Yevgeniy, Niels Ferguson, Eli Goldin, Peter Hall, and Krzysztof Z Pietrzak. “Random Oracle Combiners: Breaking the Concatenation Barrier for Collision-Resistance.” In 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference, 14082:514–46. Springer Nature, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-38545-2_17.","ama":"Dodis Y, Ferguson N, Goldin E, Hall P, Pietrzak KZ. Random oracle combiners: Breaking the concatenation barrier for collision-resistance. In: 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference. Vol 14082. Springer Nature; 2023:514-546. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-38545-2_17","short":"Y. Dodis, N. Ferguson, E. Goldin, P. Hall, K.Z. Pietrzak, in:, 43rd Annual International Cryptology Conference, Springer Nature, 2023, pp. 514–546."},"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"_id":"14428","volume":14082,"intvolume":" 14082","year":"2023","day":"09","type":"conference","date_updated":"2023-10-16T08:02:11Z","month":"08","article_processing_charge":"No","publication_status":"published","date_published":"2023-08-09T00:00:00Z","abstract":[{"text":"Suppose we have two hash functions h1 and h2, but we trust the security of only one of them. To mitigate this worry, we wish to build a hash combiner Ch1,h2 which is secure so long as one of the underlying hash functions is. This question has been well-studied in the regime of collision resistance. In this case, concatenating the two hash function outputs clearly works. Unfortunately, a long series of works (Boneh and Boyen, CRYPTO’06; Pietrzak, Eurocrypt’07; Pietrzak, CRYPTO’08) showed no (noticeably) shorter combiner for collision resistance is possible.\r\nIn this work, we revisit this pessimistic state of affairs, motivated by the observation that collision-resistance is insufficient for many interesting applications of cryptographic hash functions anyway. We argue the right formulation of the “hash combiner” is to build what we call random oracle (RO) combiners, utilizing stronger assumptions for stronger constructions.\r\nIndeed, we circumvent the previous lower bounds for collision resistance by constructing a simple length-preserving RO combiner C˜h1,h2Z1,Z2(M)=h1(M,Z1)⊕h2(M,Z2),where Z1,Z2\r\n are random salts of appropriate length. We show that this extra randomness is necessary for RO combiners, and indeed our construction is somewhat tight with this lower bound.\r\nOn the negative side, we show that one cannot generically apply the composition theorem to further replace “monolithic” hash functions h1 and h2 by some simpler indifferentiable construction (such as the Merkle-Damgård transformation) from smaller components, such as fixed-length compression functions. Finally, despite this issue, we directly prove collision resistance of the Merkle-Damgård variant of our combiner, where h1 and h2 are replaced by iterative Merkle-Damgård hashes applied to a fixed-length compression function. Thus, we can still subvert the concatenation barrier for collision-resistance combiners while utilizing practically small fixed-length components underneath.","lang":"eng"}],"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/1041","open_access":"1"}],"department":[{"_id":"KrPi"}],"date_created":"2023-10-15T22:01:11Z","user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","oa":1,"oa_version":"Preprint","scopus_import":"1","publisher":"Springer Nature","status":"public","title":"Random oracle combiners: Breaking the concatenation barrier for collision-resistance","quality_controlled":"1","alternative_title":["LNCS"]}