Security Limitations of Classical-Client Delegated Quantum Computing
Christian Badertscher, Alexandru Cojocaru, L\'eo Colisson, Elham, Kashefi, Dominik Leichtle, Atul Mantri, Petros Wallden

TL;DR
This paper investigates the security limitations of classical-client remote state preparation in delegated quantum computing, revealing fundamental constraints due to quantum no-cloning and implications for protocols like UBQC.
Contribution
It uncovers the inherent security limitations of classical-client RSP, linking it to quantum cloning impossibility and analyzing its impact on the security of delegated quantum protocols.
Findings
Classical RSP must leak full classical description of quantum states.
Ideal RSP resources cannot be constructed without significant security compromises.
Using RSP in UBQC affects its composable security guarantees.
Abstract
Secure delegated quantum computing allows a computationally weak client to outsource an arbitrary quantum computation to an untrusted quantum server in a privacy-preserving manner. One of the promising candidates to achieve classical delegation of quantum computation is classical-client remote state preparation (), where a client remotely prepares a quantum state using a classical channel. However, the privacy loss incurred by employing as a sub-module is unclear. In this work, we investigate this question using the Constructive Cryptography framework by Maurer and Renner (ICS'11). We first identify the goal of as the construction of ideal RSP resources from classical channels and then reveal the security limitations of using . First, we uncover a fundamental relationship between constructing ideal RSP resources (from classical channels) and…
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