Towards Communication-Efficient Quantum Oblivious Key Distribution
M. V. Panduranga Rao, M. Jakobi

TL;DR
This paper proposes a modified quantum oblivious key distribution protocol that significantly reduces quantum communication complexity from O(N log N) to nearly O(1) for large databases, enhancing efficiency in secure quantum communication.
Contribution
It introduces a new protocol that decreases quantum communication requirements for oblivious transfer, making it more practical for large-scale applications.
Findings
Reduced quantum communication complexity to O(N)
Further generalized protocol requires only a few hundred qubits for large databases
Maintains privacy and loss-resistance with fewer qubits exchanged
Abstract
Oblivious Transfer, a fundamental problem in the field of secure multi-party computation is defined as follows: A database DB of N bits held by Bob is queried by a user Alice who is interested in the bit DB_b in such a way that (1) Alice learns DB_b and only DB_b and (2) Bob does not learn anything about Alice's choice b. While solutions to this problem in the classical domain rely largely on unproven computational complexity theoretic assumptions, it is also known that perfect solutions that guarantee both database and user privacy are impossible in the quantum domain. Jakobi et al. [Phys. Rev. A, 83(2), 022301, Feb 2011] proposed a protocol for Oblivious Transfer using well known QKD techniques to establish an Oblivious Key to solve this problem. Their solution provided a good degree of database and user privacy (using physical principles like impossibility of perfectly distinguishing…
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