
TL;DR
This paper introduces and analyzes 'reversed space attacks' on quantum key distribution protocols, exploiting enlarged measurement spaces at the receiver's end, revealing new vulnerabilities that can compromise security without causing detectable errors.
Contribution
The paper formalizes reversed space attacks, demonstrating their effectiveness on interferometric QKD schemes and highlighting a previously unrecognized security loophole.
Findings
Reversed space attacks can fully extract information without errors.
Enlarged measurement spaces at Bob's site create new attack vectors.
The technique applies to both interferometric and polarization-based QKD.
Abstract
Many quantum key distribution (QKD) schemes are based on sending and measuring qubits -- two-dimensional quantum systems. Yet, in practical realizations and experiments, the measuring devices at the receiver's (Bob) site commonly do not measure a two-dimensional system but rather a quantum space of a larger dimension. Such an enlargement sometimes results from imperfect devices. However, in various QKD protocols such enlargement exists even in the ideal scenario when all devices are assumed to be perfect. This issue is common, for instance, in QKD schemes implemented via photons, where the parties' devices are based on Mach-Zehnder interferometers, as these inherently enlarge the quantum space in use. We show how space enlargement at Bob's site exposes the implemented protocol to new kinds of attacks, attacks that have not yet been explicitly pinpointed nor rigorously analyzed. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
