Consider three players Alice, Bob and Cath who hold a, b and c cards, respectively, from a deck of d=a+b+c cards. The cards are all different and players only know their own cards. Suppose Alice and Bob wish to communicate their cards to each other without Cath learning whether Alice or Bob holds a specific card. Considering the cards as consecutive natural numbers 0, 1,..., we investigate general conditions for when Alice or Bob can safely announce the sum of the cards they hold modulo an appropriately chosen integer. We demonstrate that this holds whenever a, b > 2 and c=1. Because Cath holds a single card, this also implies that Alice and Bob will learn the card deal from the other player’s announcement
Abstract. Secure multiparty computation can be done with a deck of playing cards. For example, den B...
AbstractUsing a random deal of cards to players and a computationally unlimited eavesdropper, all pl...
While many cryptographic protocols for card games have been proposed, all of them focus on card game...
Abstract Consider three players Alice, Bob and Cath who hold a, b and c cards, respectively, from a ...
A protocol is given which deals cards to three or more players in a fair way. Some related questions...
Given an interpreted system, we investigate ways for two agents to communicate secrets by public an...
In the generalized Russian cards problem, Alice, Bob and Cath draw a, b and c cards, respectively, ...
The elegant “five-card trick” of den Boer (EUROCRYPT 1989) allows two players to securely compute a ...
AbstractA deck of cards can be used as a cryptographic tool (Advances in cryptology : CRYPTO’93, Lec...
Card-based cryptographic protocols can perform secure computation of Boolean functions. In 2013, Che...
Secure multiparty computation can be done with a deck of playing cards. For example, den Boer (EUROC...
Card-based protocols allow to evaluate an arbitrary fixed Boolean function on a hidden input to obt...
Card-based cryptography provides simple and practicable protocols for performing secure multi-party ...
Abstract. Many information theoretically secure protocols are known for general secure multi-party c...
In the generalized Russian cards problem, the three players Alice, Bob and Cath draw a, b and c card...
Abstract. Secure multiparty computation can be done with a deck of playing cards. For example, den B...
AbstractUsing a random deal of cards to players and a computationally unlimited eavesdropper, all pl...
While many cryptographic protocols for card games have been proposed, all of them focus on card game...
Abstract Consider three players Alice, Bob and Cath who hold a, b and c cards, respectively, from a ...
A protocol is given which deals cards to three or more players in a fair way. Some related questions...
Given an interpreted system, we investigate ways for two agents to communicate secrets by public an...
In the generalized Russian cards problem, Alice, Bob and Cath draw a, b and c cards, respectively, ...
The elegant “five-card trick” of den Boer (EUROCRYPT 1989) allows two players to securely compute a ...
AbstractA deck of cards can be used as a cryptographic tool (Advances in cryptology : CRYPTO’93, Lec...
Card-based cryptographic protocols can perform secure computation of Boolean functions. In 2013, Che...
Secure multiparty computation can be done with a deck of playing cards. For example, den Boer (EUROC...
Card-based protocols allow to evaluate an arbitrary fixed Boolean function on a hidden input to obt...
Card-based cryptography provides simple and practicable protocols for performing secure multi-party ...
Abstract. Many information theoretically secure protocols are known for general secure multi-party c...
In the generalized Russian cards problem, the three players Alice, Bob and Cath draw a, b and c card...
Abstract. Secure multiparty computation can be done with a deck of playing cards. For example, den B...
AbstractUsing a random deal of cards to players and a computationally unlimited eavesdropper, all pl...
While many cryptographic protocols for card games have been proposed, all of them focus on card game...