Quantum One-Time Programs, Revisited
Aparna Gupte, Jiahui Liu, Justin Raizes, Bhaskar Roberts, Vinod Vaikuntanathan

TL;DR
This paper explores the boundaries of quantum and classical one-time programs, proposing new achievable security definitions, constructing such programs for certain functions, and analyzing their limitations.
Contribution
It introduces new, achievable definitions of one-time program security for classical functions and constructs programs under these definitions in specific models.
Findings
Constructed one-time programs for all functions in the classical oracle model.
Built one-time programs for constrained pseudorandom functions in the plain model.
Identified classes of functions that cannot be one-time programmed or leak information even in the oracle model.
Abstract
One-time programs (Goldwasser, Kalai and Rothblum, CRYPTO 2008) are functions that can be run on any single input of a user's choice, but not on a second input. Classically, they are unachievable without trusted hardware, but the destructive nature of quantum measurements seems to provide a quantum path to constructing them. Unfortunately, Broadbent, Gutoski and Stebila showed that even with quantum techniques, a strong notion of one-time programs, similar to ideal obfuscation, cannot be achieved for any non-trivial quantum function. On the positive side, Ben-David and Sattath (Quantum, 2023) showed how to construct a one-time program for a certain (probabilistic) digital signature scheme, under a weaker notion of one-time program security. There is a vast gap between achievable and provably impossible notions of one-time program security, and it is unclear what functionalities are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
