Oblivious Transfer from Zero-Knowledge Proofs Or How to Achieve Round-Optimal Quantum Oblivious Transfer and Zero-Knowledge Proofs on Quantum States

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2023
Host editors
  • J. Guo
  • R. Steinfeld
Book title Advances in Cryptology – ASIACRYPT 2023
Book subtitle 29th International Conference on the Theory and Application of Cryptology and Information Security, Guangzhou, China, December 4–8, 2023 : proceedings
ISBN
  • 9789819987412
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9789819987429
Series Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Event 29th Annual International Conference on the Theory and Application of Cryptology and Information Security, Asiacrypt 2023
Volume | Issue number VIII
Pages (from-to) 3-38
Number of pages 36
Publisher Singapore: Springer
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Informatics Institute (IVI)
Abstract

We provide a generic construction to turn any classical Zero-Knowledge (ZK) protocol into a composable (quantum) oblivious transfer (OT) protocol, mostly lifting the round-complexity properties and security guarantees (plain-model/statistical security/unstructured functions … ) of the ZK protocol to the resulting OT protocol. Such a construction is unlikely to exist classically as Cryptomania is believed to be different from Minicrypt. In particular, by instantiating our construction using Non-Interactive ZK (NIZK), we provide the first round-optimal (2-message) quantum OT protocol secure in the random oracle model, and round-optimal extensions to string and k-out-of-n OT. At the heart of our construction lies a new method that allows us to prove properties on a received quantum state without revealing additional information on it, even in a non-interactive way and/or with statistical guarantees when using an appropriate classical ZK protocol. We can notably prove that a state has been partially measured (with arbitrary constraints on the set of measured qubits), without revealing any additional information on this set. This notion can be seen as an analog of ZK to quantum states, and we expect it to be of independent interest as it extends complexity theory to quantum languages, as illustrated by the two new complexity classes we introduce, ZKstatesQIP and ZKstatesQMA.

Document type Conference contribution
Note Longer version availalbe at Cryptology ePrint Archive.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-8742-9_1
Published at https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/311
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85180782947
Downloads
2023-311 (Other version)
Permalink to this page
Back