Towards practical secure delegated quantum computing with semi-classical light
Boris Bourdoncle, Pierre-Emmanuel Emeriau, Paul Hilaire, Shane Mansfield, Luka Music, Stephen Wein

TL;DR
This paper proposes a practical secure delegated quantum computing protocol that minimizes technological requirements for both clients and servers, enabling secure remote quantum computations with current quantum hardware capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces a new SDQC protocol using simple client operations and advanced quantum emitters, enhancing practicality and security over previous methods.
Findings
Protocol achieves information-theoretic security
Requires only basic laser pulse manipulation on the client side
Utilizes quantum emitters capable of generating entanglement
Abstract
Secure Delegated Quantum Computation (SDQC) protocols are a vital piece of the future quantum information processing global architecture since they allow end-users to perform their valuable computations on remote quantum servers without fear that a malicious quantum service provider or an eavesdropper might acquire some information about their data or algorithm. They also allow end-users to check that their computation has been performed as they have specified it. However, existing protocols all have drawbacks that limit their usage in the real world. Most require the client to either operate a single-qubit source or perform single-qubit measurements, thus requiring them to still have some quantum technological capabilities albeit restricted, or require the server to perform operations which are hard to implement on real hardware (e.g isolate single photons from laser pulses and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
