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High-Precision Bootstrapping of RNS-CKKS Homomorphic Encryption Using Optimal Minimax Polynomial Approximation and Inverse Sine Function

Cited 37 time in Web of Science Cited 41 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, Joon-Woo; Lee, Eunsang; Lee, Yongwoo; Kim, Young-Sik; No, Jong-Seon

Issue Date
2021-10
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Citation
Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol.12696, pp.618-647
Abstract
Approximate homomorphic encryption with the residue number system (RNS), called RNS-variant Cheon-Kim-Kim-Song (RNS-CKKS) scheme [12, 13], is a fully homomorphic encryption scheme that supports arithmetic operations for real or complex number data encrypted. Although the RNS-CKKS scheme is a fully homomorphic encryption scheme, most of the applications with the RNS-CKKS scheme use it as the only leveled homomorphic encryption scheme because of the lack of the practicality of the bootstrapping operation of the RNS-CKKS scheme. One of the crucial problems of the bootstrapping operation is its poor precision. While other basic homomorphic operations ensure sufficiently high precision for practical use, the bootstrapping operation only supports about 20-bit fixed-point precision at best, which is not high precision enough to be used for the reliable large-depth homomorphic computations until now. In this paper, we improve the message precision in the bootstrapping operation of the RNS-CKKS scheme. Since the homomorphic modular reduction process is one of the most important steps in determining the precision of the bootstrapping, we focus on the homomorphic modular reduction process. Firstly, we propose a fast algorithm of obtaining the optimal minimax approximate polynomial of modular reduction function and the scaled sine/cosine function over the union of the approximation regions, called an improved multi-interval Remez algorithm. In fact, this algorithm derives the optimal minimax approximate polynomial of any continuous functions over any union of the finite number of intervals. Next, we propose the composite function method using the inverse sine function to reduce the difference between the scaling factor used in the bootstrapping and the default scaling factor. With these methods, we reduce the approximation error in the bootstrapping of the RNS-CKKS scheme by 1/1176-1/42 (5.4-10.2-bit precision improvement) for each parameter setting. While the bootstrapping without the composite function method has 27.2-30.3-bit precision at maximum, the bootstrapping with the composite function method has 32.6-40.5-bit precision.
ISSN
0302-9743
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/186918
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-77870-5_22
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