On the Compressed-Oracle Technique, and Post-Quantum Security of Proofs of Sequential Work
Kai-Min Chung, Serge Fehr, Yu-Hsuan Huang, Tai-Ning Liao

TL;DR
This paper refines the compressed oracle technique for quantum query analysis, introduces a framework for classical reasoning in quantum bounds, and applies it to prove the quantum security of proofs of sequential work.
Contribution
It provides a simplified framework for quantum query complexity proofs using classical reasoning, extending to parallel queries and applying to cryptographic protocols.
Findings
Recovered known quantum query bounds like parallel Grover
Established new bounds such as parallel BHT collision search
Proved the quantum security of proofs of sequential work protocols
Abstract
We revisit the so-called compressed oracle technique, introduced by Zhandry for analyzing quantum algorithms in the quantum random oracle model (QROM). To start off with, we offer a concise exposition of the technique, which easily extends to the parallel-query QROM, where in each query-round the considered algorithm may make several queries to the QROM in parallel. This variant of the QROM allows for a more fine-grained query-complexity analysis. Our main technical contribution is a framework that simplifies the use of (the parallel-query generalization of) the compressed oracle technique for proving query complexity results. With our framework in place, whenever applicable, it is possible to prove quantum query complexity lower bounds by means of purely classical reasoning. More than that, for typical examples the crucial classical observations that give rise to the classical bounds…
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