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Hauptverfasser: Kim, Do Hyun, Cetinkaya, Ahmet
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.05111
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author Kim, Do Hyun
Cetinkaya, Ahmet
author_facet Kim, Do Hyun
Cetinkaya, Ahmet
contents In this paper, we provide a probabilistic analysis of the confidentiality in a card-based protocol. We focus on Bert den Boer's original Five Card Trick to develop our approach. Five Card Trick was formulated as a secure two-party computation method, where two players use colored cards with identical backs to calculate the logical AND operation on the bits that they choose. In this method, the players first arrange the cards privately, and then shuffle them through a random cut. Finally, they reveal the shuffled arrangement to determine the result of the operation. An unbiased random cut is essential to prevent players from exposing their chosen bits to each other. However, players typically choose to move cards within the deck even though not moving any cards should be equally likely. This unconscious behavior results in a biased, nonuniform shuffling-distribution in the sense that some arrangements of cards are slightly more probable after the cut. Such a nonuniform distribution creates an opportunity for a malicious player to gain advantage in guessing the other player's choice. We provide the conditional probabilities of such guesses as a way to quantify the information leakage. Furthermore, we utilize the eigenstructure of a Markov chain to derive tight bounds on the number of times the biased random cuts must be repeated to reduce the leakage to an acceptable level. We also discuss the generalization of our approach to the setting where shuffling is conducted by a malicious player.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_05111
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Confidentiality in a Card-Based Protocol Under Repeated Biased Shuffles
Kim, Do Hyun
Cetinkaya, Ahmet
Cryptography and Security
Information Theory
Probability
In this paper, we provide a probabilistic analysis of the confidentiality in a card-based protocol. We focus on Bert den Boer's original Five Card Trick to develop our approach. Five Card Trick was formulated as a secure two-party computation method, where two players use colored cards with identical backs to calculate the logical AND operation on the bits that they choose. In this method, the players first arrange the cards privately, and then shuffle them through a random cut. Finally, they reveal the shuffled arrangement to determine the result of the operation. An unbiased random cut is essential to prevent players from exposing their chosen bits to each other. However, players typically choose to move cards within the deck even though not moving any cards should be equally likely. This unconscious behavior results in a biased, nonuniform shuffling-distribution in the sense that some arrangements of cards are slightly more probable after the cut. Such a nonuniform distribution creates an opportunity for a malicious player to gain advantage in guessing the other player's choice. We provide the conditional probabilities of such guesses as a way to quantify the information leakage. Furthermore, we utilize the eigenstructure of a Markov chain to derive tight bounds on the number of times the biased random cuts must be repeated to reduce the leakage to an acceptable level. We also discuss the generalization of our approach to the setting where shuffling is conducted by a malicious player.
title Confidentiality in a Card-Based Protocol Under Repeated Biased Shuffles
topic Cryptography and Security
Information Theory
Probability
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.05111