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Improving device-independent weak coin flipping protocols

Abstract

Weak coin flipping is the cryptographic task where Alice and Bob remotely flip a coin but want opposite outcomes. This work studies this task in the device-independent regime where Alice and Bob neither trust each other, nor their quantum devices. The best protocol was devised over a decade ago by Silman, Chailloux, Aharon, Kerenidis, Pironio, and Massar with bias ε0.33664\varepsilon \approx 0.33664, where the bias is a commonly adopted security measure for coin flipping protocols. This work presents two techniques to lower the bias of such protocols, namely self-testing and abort-phobic compositions. We apply these techniques to the SCAKPM '11 protocol above and, assuming a continuity conjecture, lower the bias to ε0.29104\varepsilon \approx 0.29104. We believe that these techniques could be useful in the design of device-independent protocols for a variety of other tasks. Independently of weak coin flipping, en route to our results, we show how one can test n1n-1 out of nn devices, and estimate the performance of the remaining device, for later use in the protocol. The proof uses linear programming and, due to its generality, may find applications elsewhere.

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