Paper 2026/133
Homomorphic Signatures : A Systematization of Knowledge
Abstract
Homomorphic Signatures (HS) enable the authentication of data that has been processed by an untrusted party, allowing a verifier to check the correctness of a computation without access to the original signed inputs. Since their introduction, HS have evolved from algebraically restricted linear schemes to expressive non-linear and Fully Homomorphic Signature (FHS) constructions, spanning diverse cryptographic assumptions and security models. This paper presents a Systematization of Knowledge (SoK) on homomorphic signatures. We organize existing schemes along key dimensions including functional expressiveness, underlying cryptographic primitives, security notions (selective vs. adapt…
Paper 2026/133
Homomorphic Signatures : A Systematization of Knowledge
Abstract
Homomorphic Signatures (HS) enable the authentication of data that has been processed by an untrusted party, allowing a verifier to check the correctness of a computation without access to the original signed inputs. Since their introduction, HS have evolved from algebraically restricted linear schemes to expressive non-linear and Fully Homomorphic Signature (FHS) constructions, spanning diverse cryptographic assumptions and security models. This paper presents a Systematization of Knowledge (SoK) on homomorphic signatures. We organize existing schemes along key dimensions including functional expressiveness, underlying cryptographic primitives, security notions (selective vs. adaptive, single-key vs. multi-key), and privacy guarantees such as context hiding. This unified perspective highlights a fundamental shift from algebraic constructions toward proof-based and post-quantum designs, as well as the growing importance of Multi-Key Homomorphic Signatures (MKHS) for decentralized settings. We conclude by identifying open problems and emerging directions that must be addressed to bridge the gap between theoretical HS constructions and practical verifiable computation.
BibTeX
@misc{cryptoeprint:2026/133,
author = {Olive Chakraborty},
title = {Homomorphic Signatures : A Systematization of Knowledge},
howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2026/133},
year = {2026},
url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2026/133}
}