Analytic quantum weak coin flipping protocols with arbitrarily small bias
Atul Singh Arora, J\'er\'emie Roland, Chrysoula Vlachou

TL;DR
This paper introduces new analytical techniques to construct quantum weak coin flipping protocols with arbitrarily small bias, simplifying previous proofs and providing explicit examples such as a bias of 1/14.
Contribution
The authors develop a fully analytical method for constructing quantum WCF protocols with near-zero bias, improving upon prior numerical and non-constructive approaches.
Findings
Constructed WCF protocols with bias approaching zero.
Provided a simplified, analytical proof of existence.
Explicit example of a protocol with bias 1/14.
Abstract
Weak coin flipping (WCF) is a fundamental cryptographic primitive for two-party secure computation, where two distrustful parties need to remotely establish a shared random bit whilst having opposite preferred outcomes. It is the strongest known primitive with arbitrarily close to perfect security quantumly while classically, its security is completely compromised (unless one makes further assumptions, such as computational hardness). A WCF protocol is said to have bias if neither party can force their preferred outcome with probability greater than . Classical WCF protocols are shown to have bias , i.e., a cheating party can always force their preferred outcome. On the other hand, there exist quantum WCF protocols with arbitrarily small bias, as Mochon showed in his seminal work in 2007 [arXiv:0711.4114]. In particular, he proved the existence of a family…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Cryptography and Data Security
