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Main Authors: Chia, Nai-Hui, Chung, Kai-Min, Liang, Xiao, Liu, Jiahui
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.06317
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author Chia, Nai-Hui
Chung, Kai-Min
Liang, Xiao
Liu, Jiahui
author_facet Chia, Nai-Hui
Chung, Kai-Min
Liang, Xiao
Liu, Jiahui
contents Zero-Knowledge (ZK) protocols have been intensely studied due to their fundamental importance and versatility. However, quantum information's inherent differences significantly alter the landscape, necessitating a re-examination of ZK designs. A crucial aspect is round complexity, linked to $\textit{simulation}$, which forms the foundation of ZK definition and security proofs. In the $\textit{post-quantum}$ setting, where honest parties and channels are classical but adversaries quantum, Chia et al. [FOCS'21] showed constant-round $\textit{black-box-simulatable}$ ZK arguments (BBZK) for $\mathbf{NP}$ are impossible unless $\mathbf{NP} \subseteq \mathbf{BQP}$. But this problem remains open when all parties and communication are quantum. Indeed, this problem interests the broader theory of quantum computing. Investigating how quantum power alters tasks like the $\textit{unconditional}$ security of QKD and incorporating OT in MiniQCrypt has been crucial. Moreover, quantum communication has enabled round compression for commitments and interactive arguments. Along this line, understanding if quantum computing could fundamentally change ZK protocols is vital. We resolved this problem by proving that only languages in $\mathbf{BQP}$ admit constant-round $\textit{fully-quantum}$ BBZK. This result holds significant implications. Firstly, it illuminates the nature of quantum zero-knowledge and provides valuable insights for designing future protocols in the quantum realm. Secondly, it relates ZK round complexity with the intriguing problem of $\mathbf{BQP}$ vs $\mathbf{QMA}$, which is out of the reach of previous analogue impossibility results in the classical or post-quantum setting. Lastly, it justifies the need for the $\textit{non-black-box}$ simulation techniques or the relaxed security notions employed in existing constant-round fully-quantum BBZK protocols.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_06317
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Black-Box Simulation Barrier Persists in a Fully Quantum World
Chia, Nai-Hui
Chung, Kai-Min
Liang, Xiao
Liu, Jiahui
Quantum Physics
Cryptography and Security
Zero-Knowledge (ZK) protocols have been intensely studied due to their fundamental importance and versatility. However, quantum information's inherent differences significantly alter the landscape, necessitating a re-examination of ZK designs. A crucial aspect is round complexity, linked to $\textit{simulation}$, which forms the foundation of ZK definition and security proofs. In the $\textit{post-quantum}$ setting, where honest parties and channels are classical but adversaries quantum, Chia et al. [FOCS'21] showed constant-round $\textit{black-box-simulatable}$ ZK arguments (BBZK) for $\mathbf{NP}$ are impossible unless $\mathbf{NP} \subseteq \mathbf{BQP}$. But this problem remains open when all parties and communication are quantum. Indeed, this problem interests the broader theory of quantum computing. Investigating how quantum power alters tasks like the $\textit{unconditional}$ security of QKD and incorporating OT in MiniQCrypt has been crucial. Moreover, quantum communication has enabled round compression for commitments and interactive arguments. Along this line, understanding if quantum computing could fundamentally change ZK protocols is vital. We resolved this problem by proving that only languages in $\mathbf{BQP}$ admit constant-round $\textit{fully-quantum}$ BBZK. This result holds significant implications. Firstly, it illuminates the nature of quantum zero-knowledge and provides valuable insights for designing future protocols in the quantum realm. Secondly, it relates ZK round complexity with the intriguing problem of $\mathbf{BQP}$ vs $\mathbf{QMA}$, which is out of the reach of previous analogue impossibility results in the classical or post-quantum setting. Lastly, it justifies the need for the $\textit{non-black-box}$ simulation techniques or the relaxed security notions employed in existing constant-round fully-quantum BBZK protocols.
title The Black-Box Simulation Barrier Persists in a Fully Quantum World
topic Quantum Physics
Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.06317