TL;DR
This paper proves that spatial isolation guarantees zero knowledge in multi-prover interactive proofs even with quantum entanglement, extending classical results to the quantum setting with new algebraic techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a zero knowledge protocol for NEXP languages that remains sound against entangled provers, using novel algebraic methods and a new commitment scheme.
Findings
Zero knowledge holds for NEXP even with quantum entanglement.
Develops a zero knowledge variant of the sumcheck protocol.
Introduces a new algebraic commitment scheme.
Abstract
Zero knowledge plays a central role in cryptography and complexity. The seminal work of Ben-Or et al. (STOC 1988) shows that zero knowledge can be achieved unconditionally for any language in NEXP, as long as one is willing to make a suitable physical assumption: if the provers are spatially isolated, then they can be assumed to be playing independent strategies. Quantum mechanics, however, tells us that this assumption is unrealistic, because spatially-isolated provers could share a quantum entangled state and realize a non-local correlated strategy. The MIP* model captures this setting. In this work we study the following question: does spatial isolation still suffice to unconditionally achieve zero knowledge even in the presence of quantum entanglement? We answer this question in the affirmative: we prove that every language in NEXP has a 2-prover zero knowledge interactive proof…
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Videos
Spatial Isolation Implies Zero Knowledge Even in a Quantum World· youtube
