
Open access
Date
2025Type
- Conference Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
We study recent algebraic attacks (Briaud-Øygarden EC’23) on the Regular Syndrome Decoding (RSD) problem and the assumptions underlying the correctness of their attacks’ complexity estimates. By relating these assumptions to interesting algebraic-combinatorial problems, we prove that they do not hold in full generality. However, we show that they are (asymptotically) true for most parameter sets, supporting the soundness of algebraic attacks on RSD. Further, we prove—without any heuristics or assumptions—that RSD can be broken in polynomial time whenever the number of error blocks times the square of the size of error blocks is larger than 2 times the square of the dimension of the code.
Additionally, we use our methodology to attack a variant of the Learning With Errors problem where each error term lies in a fixed set of constant size. We prove that this problem can be broken in polynomial time, given a sufficient number of samples. This result improves on the seminal work by Arora and Ge (ICALP’11), as the attack’s time complexity is independent of the LWE modulus. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000732894Publication status
publishedExternal links
Book title
Advances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 2025Journal / series
Lecture Notes in Computer ScienceVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
SpringerEvent
Subject
CryptographyOrganisational unit
09653 - Paterson, Kenneth / Paterson, Kenneth
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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