Abstract

Consider the following secret-sharing problem: A file s should be distributed between n servers such that (d-1)-subsets cannot recover the file, (d+1)-subsets can recover the file, and d -subsets should be able to recover s if and only if they appear in some pre-defined list L . The goal is to minimize the information ratio—that is, the number of bits stored on a server per each bit of the secret. We show that for any constant d and any pre-defined list L , if the file is sufficiently long (exponential in n d ), the problem can be solved with a constant asymptotic information ratio of c d that does not grow with the number of servers n . This result is based on a new construction of d -party conditional disclosure of secrets for arbitrary predicates over an n -size domain in which each party communicates at most four bits per secret bit. In both settings, previous results achieved a non-constant information ratio that grows asymptotically with n , even for the simpler special case of d = 2 . Moreover, our constructions yield the first example of an access structure whose amortized information ratio is constant, whereas its best-known non-amortized information ratio is sub-exponential, thus providing a unique evidence for the potential power of amortization in the context of secret sharing. Our main result applies to exponentially long secrets, and so it should be mainly viewed as a barrier against amortizable lower-bound techniques. We also show that in some natural simple cases (e.g., low-degree predicates), amortization kicks in even for quasi-polynomially long secrets. Finally, we prove some limited lower bounds and point out some limitations of existing lower-bound techniques.

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