QUANT-PHCRApr 12, 2019

QFactory: classically-instructed remote secret qubits preparation

arXiv:1904.06303v141 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses secure quantum computation and communications for classical clients, but it is incremental as it builds on prior concepts and extensions.

The authors tackled the problem of enabling classical parties to securely instruct quantum servers to prepare secret qubits, by defining a basic primitive using BB84 states and providing a protocol secure against malicious servers, with security reduced to the hardness of the Learning With Errors problem.

The functionality of classically-instructed remotely prepared random secret qubits was introduced in (Cojocaru et al 2018) as a way to enable classical parties to participate in secure quantum computation and communications protocols. The idea is that a classical party (client) instructs a quantum party (server) to generate a qubit to the server's side that is random, unknown to the server but known to the client. Such task is only possible under computational assumptions. In this contribution we define a simpler (basic) primitive consisting of only BB84 states, and give a protocol that realizes this primitive and that is secure against the strongest possible adversary (an arbitrarily deviating malicious server). The specific functions used, were constructed based on known trapdoor one-way functions, resulting to the security of our basic primitive being reduced to the hardness of the Learning With Errors problem. We then give a number of extensions, building on this basic module: extension to larger set of states (that includes non-Clifford states); proper consideration of the abort case; and verifiablity on the module level. The latter is based on "blind self-testing", a notion we introduced, proved in a limited setting and conjectured its validity for the most general case.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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