One-Wayness in Quantum Cryptography
Tomoyuki Morimae, Takashi Yamakawa

TL;DR
This paper explores the concept of one-way state generators in quantum cryptography, establishing their properties, variants, and equivalences with other primitives like quantum digital signatures and money schemes.
Contribution
It introduces and analyzes one-way state generators, generalizes their definition, and proves their equivalence with various quantum cryptographic primitives.
Findings
Weak OWSGs are equivalent to OWSGs
Quantum digital signatures are equivalent to OWSGs
Quantum money schemes imply OWSGs
Abstract
The existence of one-way functions is one of the most fundamental assumptions in classical cryptography. In the quantum world, on the other hand, there are evidences that some cryptographic primitives can exist even if one-way functions do not exist. We therefore have the following important open problem in quantum cryptography: What is the most fundamental element in quantum cryptography? In this direction, Brakerski, Canetti, and Qian recently defined a notion called EFI pairs, which are pairs of efficiently generatable states that are statistically distinguishable but computationally indistinguishable, and showed its equivalence with some cryptographic primitives including commitments, oblivious transfer, and general multi-party computations. However, their work focuses on decision-type primitives and does not cover search-type primitives like quantum money and digital signatures. In…
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