Linear (2,p,p)-AONTs do Exist
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A $(t,s,v)$-all-or-nothing transform (AONT) is a bijective mapping defined on $s$-tuples over an alphabet of size $v$, which satisfies that if any $s-t$ of the $s$ outputs are given, then the values of any $t$ inputs are completely undetermined. When $t$ and $v$ are fixed, to determine the maximum integer $s$ such that a $(t,s,v)$-AONT exists is the main research objective. In this paper, we solve three open problems proposed in [IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory 64 (2018), 3136-3143.] and show that there do exist linear $(2,p,p)$-AONTs. Then for the size of the alphabet being a prime power, we give the first infinite class of linear AONTs which is better than the linear AONTs defined by Cauchy matrices. Besides, we also present a recursive construction for general AONTs and a new relationship between AONTs and orthogonal arrays.
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