pith. sign in

arxiv: 2512.08918 · v2 · pith:PKEA7TUAnew · submitted 2025-12-09 · 💻 cs.CR

Improved Pseudorandom Codes from Permuted Puzzles

classification 💻 cs.CR
keywords pseudorandomrobustnesscodesconjecturepermutedpseudorandomnesswatermarkadversaries
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

Watermarks are an essential tool for identifying AI-generated content. Recently, Christ and Gunn (CRYPTO '24) introduced pseudorandom error-correcting codes (PRCs), which are equivalent to watermarks with strong robustness and quality guarantees. A PRC is a pseudorandom encryption scheme whose decryption algorithm tolerates a high rate of errors. Pseudorandomness ensures quality preservation of the watermark, and error tolerance of decryption translates to the watermark's ability to withstand modification of the content. In the short time since the introduction of PRCs, several works (NeurIPS '24, RANDOM '25, STOC '25) have proposed new constructions. Curiously, all of these constructions are vulnerable to quasipolynomial-time distinguishing attacks. Furthermore, all lack robustness to edits over a constant-sized alphabet, which is necessary for a meaningfully robust LLM watermark. Lastly, they lack robustness to adversaries who know the watermarking detection key. Until now, it was not clear whether any of these properties was achievable individually, let alone together. We construct pseudorandom codes that achieve all of the above: plausible subexponential pseudorandomness security, robustness to worst-case edits over a binary alphabet, and robustness against even computationally unbounded adversaries that have the detection key. Pseudorandomness rests on a new assumption that we formalize, the permuted codes conjecture, which states that a distribution of permuted noisy codewords is pseudorandom. We show that this conjecture is implied by the permuted puzzles conjecture used previously to construct doubly efficient private information retrieval. To give further evidence, we show that the conjecture holds against a broad class of simple distinguishers, including read-once branching programs.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Forward citations

Cited by 2 Pith papers

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Undetectable Conversations Between AI Agents via Pseudorandom Noise-Resilient Key Exchange

    cs.CR 2026-04 unverdicted novelty 8.0

    AI agents can conduct undetectable covert conversations using a new pseudorandom noise-resilient key exchange that works without shared keys and with only constant min-entropy in messages.

  2. High-Rate Public-Key Pseudorandom Codes for Edit Errors

    cs.CR 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    First high-rate public-key binary PRCs for edit channels via reduction from Hamming-robust PRCs and alphabet-size constructions attaining near-Singleton rates.