Certified Everlasting Zero-Knowledge Proof for QMA
Taiga Hiroka, Tomoyuki Morimae, Ryo Nishimaki, Takashi Yamakawa

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel zero-knowledge proof system for QMA that remains secure even against unbounded adversaries by using a classical certificate of quantum information deletion, combining new cryptographic primitives.
Contribution
It presents the first certified everlasting zero-knowledge proof for QMA, introducing a new primitive and combining quantum cryptography techniques in the quantum random oracle model.
Findings
Constructed a commitment with statistical binding and certified everlasting hiding.
Achieved a zero-knowledge proof for QMA secure against unbounded adversaries.
Built upon quantum encryption with certified deletion and quantum sigma-protocols.
Abstract
In known constructions of classical zero-knowledge protocols for NP, either of zero-knowledge or soundness holds only against computationally bounded adversaries. Indeed, achieving both statistical zero-knowledge and statistical soundness at the same time with classical verifier is impossible for NP unless the polynomial-time hierarchy collapses, and it is also believed to be impossible even with a quantum verifier. In this work, we introduce a novel compromise, which we call the certified everlasting zero-knowledge proof for QMA. It is a computational zero-knowledge proof for QMA, but the verifier issues a classical certificate that shows that the verifier has deleted its quantum information. If the certificate is valid, even unbounded malicious verifier can no longer learn anything beyond the validity of the statement. We construct a certified everlasting zero-knowledge proof for QMA.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCryptography and Data Security · Complexity and Algorithms in Graphs · Privacy-Preserving Technologies in Data
