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\begin{proposition}
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If there are no refresh operations, then any adversary who links
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coins can recognize blinding factors.
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\end{proposition}
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\begin{proof}
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In effect, coin withdrawal transcripts consist of numbers $b m^d \mod n$
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The blinding factor is created with a full domain hash
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\end{proof}
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We say a blind signature
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linkable if some probabilistic polynomial
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time (PPT) adversary has a non-negligible advantage indentifying
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the
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, given some withdrawal and refresh
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transcripts
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We say a coin $C_0$ is {\em linkable} to the withdrawal or refresh
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operation in which it was created if some probabilistic polynomial
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time (PPT) adversary has a non-negligible advantage in guessing
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which of $\{ C_0, C_1 \}$ were created in that operation,
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where $C_1$ is an unrelated third coin.
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% TODO: Compare this definition with some from the literature
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% TODO: Should this definition be broadened?
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.. reference literate about withdrawal ..
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\begin{proposition}
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In the random oracle model,
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if a coin created by refresh is linkable to the refresh operation
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that created it, then some PPT adversary has a non-negligible
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advantage in determining the shared secret of an eliptic curve
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Diffie-Hellman key exchange on curve25519.
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\end{proposition}
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% Intuitively this follows from \cite{Rudich88}[Theorem 4.1], but
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% we provide slightly more formality.
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\begin{proof}
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Assume a PPT adversary $A$ has a non-negligible advantage in solving
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the linking problem.
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We have two curve points $C = c G$ and $T = t G$ for which
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we wish to compute the shared secret $c t G$.
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We make $C$ into a coin by singing it with a denomination key
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invented for this purpose. We let $T^{(1)}$ denote $T$ and
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invent $\kappa-1$ linking keys $T^{(2)},\ldots,T^{(\kappa)}$.
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We shall extract the shared secret by constructing an algorithm
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that runs the refresh protocol and then runs $A$ using the natural
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simulation of a random oracle, namely answering new queries with
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random bits, yet recording the answers in a database so as to
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provide idendical answers to identical queries.
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We may take $\gamma=1$ by restarting the exchange with a clean
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database. As a result, the exchange never checks the commitment
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covering $T^{(1)}$, but this alone does not suffice to discount
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the any information contained in the commitment.
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Instead, we observe that our commitments consist of random oracle
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queries distinct from anything else in the protocol, so they contain
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no information of use to $A$, and can safely be omitted.
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We do not know $c t G$ so our simulation cannot run the KDF to
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derive the new coin that $A$ can link.
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... random oracle ..
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\end{proof}
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In principle, one might worry if coins created in the same withdrawal
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or refresh opeartion might be linkable to one another without being
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linkable to the operation, but addressing this concern would take us
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somewhat far afield and require similar methods.
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