Dispelling Myths on Superposition Attacks: Formal Security Model and Attack Analyses
Luka Music, C\'eline Chevalier, Elham Kashefi

TL;DR
This paper introduces the first computational security model for multiparty protocols against superposition attacks, analyzes existing protocols, and constructs a new protocol resistant to such quantum-inspired threats.
Contribution
It proposes a novel security model for multiparty protocols under superposition attacks and demonstrates its application through analysis and new protocol design.
Findings
The One-Time-Pad protocol remains secure under the new model.
A variant of Yao's protocol is vulnerable to superposition attacks.
Adding classical communication can increase susceptibility to quantum attacks.
Abstract
It is of folkloric belief that the security of classical cryptographic protocols is automatically broken if the Adversary is allowed to perform superposition queries and the honest players forced to perform actions coherently on quantum states. Another widely held intuition is that enforcing measurements on the exchanged messages is enough to protect protocols from these attacks. However, the reality is much more complex. Security models dealing with superposition attacks only consider unconditional security. Conversely, security models considering computational security assume that all supposedly classical messages are measured, which forbids by construction the analysis of superposition attacks. Boneh and Zhandry have started to study the quantum computational security for classical primitives in their seminal work at Crypto'13, but only in the single-party setting. To the best of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications
