Constant-round Blind Classical Verification of Quantum Sampling
Kai-Min Chung, Yi Lee, Han-Hsuan Lin, and Xiaodi Wu

TL;DR
This paper advances the field of classical verification of quantum computation by constructing protocols for quantum sampling problems and introducing a generic compiler for blindness, resulting in the first constant-round blind protocols for BQP and SampBQP.
Contribution
It introduces a four-message CVQC protocol for SampBQP based on LWE assumptions and a generic compiler that transforms any CVQC protocol into a blind one, achieving constant rounds.
Findings
Developed a CVQC protocol for SampBQP using LWE assumptions.
Created a generic compiler for transforming CVQC protocols into blind protocols.
Achieved the first constant-round blind CVQC protocols for BQP and SampBQP.
Abstract
In a recent breakthrough, Mahadev constructed a classical verification of quantum computation (CVQC) protocol for a classical client to delegate decision problems in BQP to an untrusted quantum prover under computational assumptions. In this work, we explore further the feasibility of CVQC with the more general sampling problems in BQP and with the desirable blindness property. We contribute affirmative solutions to both as follows. (1) Motivated by the sampling nature of many quantum applications (e.g., quantum algorithms for machine learning and quantum supremacy tasks), we initiate the study of CVQC for quantum sampling problems (denoted by SampBQP). More precisely, in a CVQC protocol for a SampBQP problem, the prover and the verifier are given an input and a quantum circuit , and the goal of the classical client is to learn a sample from the output $z…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Cryptography and Data Security
