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Zero-Knowledge Proofs of Quantumness

Authors:
Duong Hieu Phan , LTCI, Telecom Paris, Institut Polytechnique de Paris, Paris
Weiqiang Wen , LTCI, Telecom Paris, Institut Polytechnique de Paris, Paris
Xingyu Yan , State Key Laboratory of Networking and Switching Technology, Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, Beijing, 100876, School of Cyberspace Science and Technology, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, 100081
Jinwei Zheng , LTCI, Telecom Paris, Institut Polytechnique de Paris, Paris
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DOI: 10.62056/ayiv4fe-3
URL: https://cic.iacr.org/p/1/4/24
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Abstract:

With the rapid development of quantum computers, proofs of quantumness have recently become an interesting and intriguing research direction. However, in all current schemes for proofs of quantumness, quantum provers almost invariably face the risk of being maliciously exploited by classical verifiers. In fact, through malicious strategies in interaction with quantum provers, classical verifiers could solve some instances of hard problems that arise from the specific scheme in use. In other words, malicious verifiers can break some schemes (that quantum provers are not aware of) through interaction with quantum provers. All this is due to the lack of formalization that prevents malicious verifiers from extracting useful information in proofs of quantumness.

To address this issue, we formalize zero-knowledge proofs of quantumness. Intuitively, the zero-knowledge property necessitates that the information gained by the classical verifier from interactions with the quantum prover should not surpass what can be simulated using a simulated classical prover interacting with the same verifier. As a result, the new zero-knowledge notion can prevent any malicious verifier from exploiting quantum advantage. Interestingly, we find that the classical zero-knowledge proof is sufficient to compile some existing proofs of quantumness schemes into zero-knowledge proofs of quantumness schemes.

Due to some technical reason, it appears to be more general to require zero-knowledge proof on the verifier side instead of the prover side. Intuitively, this helps to regulate the verifier's behavior from malicious to be honest-but-curious. As a result, both parties will play not only one role in the proofs of quantumness but also the dual role in the classical zero-knowledge proof.

Specifically, the two principle proofs of quantumness schemes: Shor's factoring-based scheme and learning with errors-based scheme in [Brakerski et al, FOCS, 2018], can be transformed into zero-knowledge proofs of quantumness by requiring an extractable non-interactive zero-knowledge argument on the verifier side. Notably, the zero-knowledge proofs of quantumness can be viewed as an enhanced security notion for proofs of quantumness. To prevent malicious verifiers from exploiting the quantum device's capabilities or knowledge, it is advisable to transition existing proofs of quantumness schemes to this framework whenever feasible.

BibTeX
@article{cic-2025-34917,
  title={Zero-Knowledge Proofs of Quantumness},
  journal={cic},
  publisher={International Association for Cryptologic Research},
  volume={1, Issue 4},
  url={https://cic.iacr.org/p/1/4/24},
  doi={10.62056/ayiv4fe-3},
  author={Duong Hieu Phan and Weiqiang Wen and Xingyu Yan and Jinwei Zheng},
  year=2025
}