The device-unique response of a physically unclonable function
(PUF) can serve as the root of trust in an embedded cryptographic system. Fuzzy extractors transform this noisy non-uniformly distributed secret into a stable high-entropy key. The overall efficiency thereof, typically depending on error-correction with a binary [n, k, d] block code,
is determined by the universal and well-known (n − k) bound on the min-entropy loss. We derive new considerably tighter bounds for PUFinduced distributions that suffer from, e.g., bias or spatial correlations. The bounds are easy-to-evaluate and apply to large non-trivial codes, e.g., BCH, Hamming and Reed-Muller codes. Apart from an inherent reduction in implementation footprint, the newly developed theory also
facilitates the analysis of state-of-the-art error-correction methods for PUFs. As such, we debunk the reusability claim of the reverse fuzzy extractor. Moreover, we provide proper quantitative motivation for debiasing schemes, as this was missing in the original proposals.
«
The device-unique response of a physically unclonable function
(PUF) can serve as the root of trust in an embedded cryptographic system. Fuzzy extractors transform this noisy non-uniformly distributed secret into a stable high-entropy key. The overall efficiency thereof, typically depending on error-correction with a binary [n, k, d] block code,
is determined by the universal and well-known (n − k) bound on the min-entropy loss. We derive new considerably tighter bounds for PUFinduced distribu...
»