8
6

Proofs of Quantumness from Trapdoor Permutations

Abstract

Assume that Alice can do only classical probabilistic polynomial-time computing while Bob can do quantum polynomial-time computing. Alice and Bob communicate over only classical channels, and finally Bob gets a state x0+x1|x_0\rangle+|x_1\rangle with some bit strings x0x_0 and x1x_1. Is it possible that Alice can know {x0,x1}\{x_0,x_1\} but Bob cannot? Such a task, called {\it remote state preparations}, is indeed possible under some complexity assumptions, and is bases of many quantum cryptographic primitives such as proofs of quantumness, (classical-client) blind quantum computing, (classical) verifications of quantum computing, and quantum money. A typical technique to realize remote state preparations is to use 2-to-1 trapdoor collision resistant hash functions: Alice sends a 2-to-1 trapdoor collision resistant hash function ff to Bob, and Bob evaluates it on superposition and measures the image. Bob's post-measurement state is x0+x1|x_0\rangle+|x_1\rangle, where f(x0)=f(x1)=yf(x_0)=f(x_1)=y. With the trapdoor, Alice can learn {x0,x1}\{x_0,x_1\}, but due to the collision resistance, Bob cannot. This Alice's advantage can be leveraged to realize the quantum cryptographic primitives listed above. It seems that the collision resistance is essential here. In this paper, surprisingly, we show that the collision resistance is not necessary for a restricted case: we show that (non-verifiable) remote state preparations of x0+x1|x_0\rangle+|x_1\rangle secure against {\it classical} probabilistic polynomial-time Bob can be constructed from classically-secure (full-domain) trapdoor permutations. Trapdoor permutations are not likely to imply the collision resistance, because black-box reductions from collision-resistant hash functions to trapdoor permutations are known to be impossible. As an application of our result, we construct proofs of quantumness from classically-secure (full-domain) trapdoor permutations.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper