English

Some Facets of Complexity Theory and Cryptography: A Five-Lectures Tutorial

Computational Complexity 2007-05-23 v2 Cryptography and Security

Abstract

In this tutorial, selected topics of cryptology and of computational complexity theory are presented. We give a brief overview of the history and the foundations of classical cryptography, and then move on to modern public-key cryptography. Particular attention is paid to cryptographic protocols and the problem of constructing the key components of such protocols such as one-way functions. A function is one-way if it is easy to compute, but hard to invert. We discuss the notion of one-way functions both in a cryptographic and in a complexity-theoretic setting. We also consider interactive proof systems and present some interesting zero-knowledge protocols. In a zero-knowledge protocol one party can convince the other party of knowing some secret information without disclosing any bit of this information. Motivated by these protocols, we survey some complexity-theoretic results on interactive proof systems and related complexity classes.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.cs/0111056,
  title  = {Some Facets of Complexity Theory and Cryptography: A Five-Lectures Tutorial},
  author = {Jörg Rothe},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:cs/0111056},
  year   = {2007}
}

Comments

57 pages, 17 figures, Lecture Notes for the 11th Jyvaskyla Summer School