Pairing-based cryptography was introduced by Antoine Joux~\cite{Jou00} to generalize Diffie-Hellman key exchange to three users in one round.
Since then, many constructions have been proposed for cryptographic constructions, such as identity-based encryption~\cite{BF01,Wat05} or group signature~\cite{ACJT00,BBS04}.
Multiple constructions and parameter sets coexist for pairings.
Real-world implementation are based on elliptic curves~\cite{BN06, KSS08}, but recent advances in cryptanalysis makes it hard to evaluate the security level of pairing-based cryptography~\cite{KB16,MSS17,BD18}.
In the following, we rely on the black-box definition of cryptographic pairings as bilinear maps, and on the assumed hardness of classical constant-size assumptions over pairings, namely $\SXDH$ and $\SDL$.
For cryptographic purpose, pairings are usually defined over elliptic curves, hence $\GT$ is a multiplicative subgroup of the multiplicative group of a finite field.
The advantages of the best $\ppt$ adversary against $\DDH$ in group $\GG$ and $\Gh$ are written $\advantage{\DDH}{\GG}$ and $\advantage{\DDH}{\Gh}$ respectively. Both of those quantities are assumed negligible under the $\SXDH$ assumption.
Moreover, this assumption is static, meaning that the size of the assumption is independent of any parameters, and is non-interactive, in the sense that it does not involve any oracle.
This gives a stronger security guarantee for the security of schemes proven under this kind of assumptions.
For instance, Cheon gave an attack against $q$-Strong Diffie-Hellmann problem for large values of $q$~\cite{Che06} (which usually represents the number of adversarial queries).