Lower Bounds for Linear Locally Decodable Codes and Private Information Retrieval
Abstract
We prove that if a linear error-correcting code C: {0, 1}^n → {0, 1}^m is such that a bit of the message can be probabilistically reconstructed by looking at two entries of a corrupted codeword, then m = 2^(Ω(n)). We also present several extensions of this result. We show a reduction from the complexity, of one-round, information-theoretic private information retrieval systems (with two servers) to locally decodable codes, and conclude that if all the servers' answers are linear combinations of the database content, then t = Ω(n/2^a), where t is the length of the user's query and a is the length of the servers' answers. Actually, 2^a can be replaced by O(a^k), where k is the number of bit locations in the answer that are actually inspected in the reconstruction.
Additional Information
© 2002 IEEE. Date of Current Version: 07 August 2002. We are grateful to Alex Samorodnitsky for suggesting to us the information-theoretic proof of Lemma 3.3 and allowing us to present it in Section 3.4. Thanks also to Noga Alon for providing us with a proof of Lemma 3.5 and allowing us to reproduce it in our technical report [5].Attached Files
Published - GOLaccc02.pdf
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:83d6a1d12b42caa12e7c035eea2c3ae0
|
422.4 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 27595
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20111102-143056331
- Created
-
2011-11-03Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- TAPIR