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High-Precision Bootstrapping for Approximate Homomorphic Encryption by Error Variance Minimization

Title
High-Precision Bootstrapping for Approximate Homomorphic Encryption by Error Variance Minimization
Author(s)
Lee, YongwooLee, Joon-WooKim, Young-SikKim, YongjuneNo, Jong-SeonKang, HyungChul
Issued Date
2022-06-01
Citation
International Conference on the Theory and Applications of Cryptographic Techniques, pp.551 - 580
Type
Conference Paper
ISBN
9783031069437
ISSN
0302-9743
Abstract
The Cheon-Kim-Kim-Song (CKKS) scheme (Asiacrypt’17) is one of the most promising homomorphic encryption (HE) schemes as it enables privacy-preserving computing over real (or complex) numbers. It is known that bootstrapping is the most challenging part of the CKKS scheme. Further, homomorphic evaluation of modular reduction is the core of the CKKS bootstrapping. As modular reduction is not represented by the addition and multiplication of complex numbers, approximate polynomials for modular reduction should be used. The best-known techniques (Eurocrypt’21) use a polynomial approximation for trigonometric functions and their composition. However, all the previous methods are based on an indirect approximation, and thus it requires lots of multiplicative depth to achieve high accuracy. This paper proposes a direct polynomial approximation of modular reduction for CKKS bootstrapping, which is optimal in error variance and depth. Further, we propose an efficient algorithm, namely the lazy baby-step giant-step (BSGS) algorithm, to homomorphically evaluate the approximate polynomial, utilizing the lazy relinearization/rescaling technique. The lazy-BSGS reduces the computational complexity by half compared to the ordinary BSGS algorithm. The performance improvement for the CKKS scheme by the proposed algorithm is verified by implementation using HE libraries. The implementation results show that the proposed method has a multiplicative depth of 10 for modular reduction to achieve the state-of-the-art accuracy, while the previous methods have depths of 11 to 12. Moreover, we achieve higher accuracy within a small multiplicative depth, for example, 93-bit within multiplicative depth 11. © 2022, International Association for Cryptologic Research.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/46840
DOI
10.1007/978-3-031-06944-4_19
Publisher
International Association for Cryptologic Research
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Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Information, Computing, and Intelligence Laboratory 2. Conference Papers

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