Contributed Talk 1a
contributed
Mon, 14 Aug
, 12:15 - 12:35
- Pseudorandomness with Proof of Destruction and ApplicationsAmit Behera (Ben-Gurion University); Zvika Brakerski (Weizmann Institute of Science); Or Sattath (Ben-Gurion University); Omri Shmueli (Tel Aviv University)[Abstract]Abstract: Two fundamental properties of quantum states that quantum information theory explores are pseudorandomness and provability of destruction. We introduce the notion of quantum pseudorandom states with proofs of destruction (PRSPD) that combines both these properties. Like standard pseudorandom states (PRS), these are efficiently generated quantum states that are indistinguishable from random, but they can also be measured to create a classical string. This string is verifiable (given the secret key) and certifies that the state has been destructed. We show that, similarly to PRS, PRSPD can be constructed from any post-quantum one-way function. As far as the authors are aware, this is the first construction of a family of states that satisfies both pseudorandomness and provability of destruction. We show that many cryptographic applications that were shown based on PRS variants using quantum communication can be based on (variants of) PRSPD using only classical communication. This includes symmetric encryption, message authentication, one-time signatures, commitments, and classically verifiable private quantum coins.