Building one-time memories from isolated qubits
Yi-Kai Liu

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new quantum model using isolated qubits to construct secure one-time memories, combining quantum and classical restrictions, with potential for practical implementation and enhanced security.
Contribution
It introduces a novel isolated qubits model for building information-theoretically secure OTMs and constructs such devices using quantum conjugate coding and error-correcting codes.
Findings
Constructed OTMs secure against LOCC adversaries using 2-outcome measurements
Developed data-hiding states for encoding messages with partial extractability
Proposed conjecture for efficient, computationally-secure OTMs
Abstract
One-time memories (OTM's) are simple tamper-resistant cryptographic devices, which can be used to implement one-time programs, a very general form of software protection and program obfuscation. Here we investigate the possibility of building OTM's using quantum mechanical devices. It is known that OTM's cannot exist in a fully-quantum world or in a fully-classical world. Instead, we propose a new model based on "isolated qubits" -- qubits that can only be accessed using local operations and classical communication (LOCC). This model combines a quantum resource (single-qubit measurements) with a classical restriction (on communication between qubits), and can be implemented using current technologies, such as nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond. In this model, we construct OTM's that are information-theoretically secure against one-pass LOCC adversaries that use 2-outcome measurements.…
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