By using SIAM Journals Online you agree to abide by the
Terms and Conditions of Use.

©  SIAM

 

SIAM Journal on Computing

Previous Article
The Symmetric Group Defies Strong Fourier Sampling
The dramatic exponential speedups of quantum algorithms over their best existing classical counterparts were ushered in by the technique of Fourier sampling, introduced by Bernstein and Vazirani and ...
Next Article
Concurrent Nonmalleable Commitments
We present a nonmalleable commitment scheme that retains its security properties even when concurrently executed a polynomial number of times. That is, a man-in-the-middle adversary who is simultaneo...

You are not logged in to this journal. Log in

Cryptography in the Bounded-Quantum-Storage Model

SIAM J. Comput. Volume 37, Issue 6, pp. 1865-1890 (2008)

Published March 26, 2008
Buy This PDF   (US$25)
Download PDF (282 kB) Download Compressed PostScript View Cart

We initiate the study of two-party cryptographic primitives with unconditional security, assuming that the adversary's quantum memory is of bounded size. We show that oblivious transfer and bit commitment can be implemented in this model using protocols where honest parties need no quantum memory, whereas an adversarial player needs quantum memory of size at least $n/2$ in order to break the protocol, where $n$ is the number of qubits transmitted. This is in sharp contrast to the classical bounded-memory model, where we can only tolerate adversaries with memory of size quadratic in honest players' memory size. Our protocols are efficient and noninteractive and can be implemented using today's technology. On the technical side, a new entropic uncertainty relation involving min-entropy is established.

©2008 Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
History: Received February 6, 2006; accepted November 12, 2007; published March 26, 2008
Permalink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1137/060651343

KEYWORDS and AMS

PUBLICATION DATA

ISSN:
0097-5397 (print)   1095-7111 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef SIAM

REFERENCES (44)

For access to fully linked references, you need to log in. For access to fully linked references, you need to Log in.

CITING ARTICLES

For access to citing articles, you need to log in.
For access to citing articles, you need to Log in.