How Entanglement Reshapes the Geometry of Quantum Differential Privacy
Xi Wang, Parastoo Sadeghi, Guodong Shi

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum entanglement influences local differential privacy in quantum systems, revealing a phase transition where entanglement can enhance privacy guarantees beyond classical correlations.
Contribution
It uncovers a sharp phase transition in quantum local differential privacy related to entanglement entropy, providing a geometric understanding via Riemannian optimization.
Findings
Privacy leakage decreases with entanglement beyond a threshold.
Entanglement can turn non-private mechanisms into private ones.
The transition is governed by the geometry of entanglement-constrained states.
Abstract
Quantum differential privacy provides a rigorous framework for quantifying privacy guarantees in quantum information processing. While classical correlations are typically regarded as adversarial to privacy, the role of their quantum analogue, entanglement, is not well understood. In this work, we investigate how quantum entanglement fundamentally shapes quantum local differential privacy (QLDP). We consider a bipartite quantum system whose input state has a prescribed level of entanglement, characterized by a lower bound on the entanglement entropy. Each subsystem is then processed by a local quantum mechanism and measured using local operations only, ensuring that no additional entanglement is generated during the process. Our main result reveals a sharp phase-transition phenomenon in the relation between entanglement and QLDP: below a mechanism-dependent entropy threshold, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
