Cryptographic Characterization of Quantum Advantage
Tomoyuki Morimae, Yuki Shirakawa, Takashi Yamakawa

TL;DR
This paper establishes a cryptographic equivalence between quantum advantage and classically-secure one-way puzzles, providing a complete characterization and linking fundamental quantum cryptographic primitives to quantum advantage.
Contribution
It proves that inefficient-verifier proofs of quantumness exist if and only if classically-secure one-way puzzles exist, offering the first complete cryptographic characterization of quantum advantage.
Findings
IV-PoQ exist iff classically-secure OWPuzzs exist
Quantum advantage is an application of OWPuzzs
First QCCC application of OWPuzzs
Abstract
Quantum computational advantage refers to an existence of computational tasks that are easy for quantum computing but hard for classical one. Unconditionally showing quantum advantage is beyond our current understanding of complexity theory, and therefore some computational assumptions are needed. Which complexity assumption is necessary and sufficient for quantum advantage? In this paper, we show that inefficient-verifier proofs of quantumness (IV-PoQ) exist if and only if classically-secure one-way puzzles (OWPuzzs) exist. As far as we know, this is the first time that a complete cryptographic characterization of quantum advantage is obtained. IV-PoQ capture various types of quantum advantage previously studied, such as sampling-based quantum advantage and searching-based one. Previous work [Morimae and Yamakawa, Crypto 2024] showed that IV-PoQ can be constructed from OWFs, but a…
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