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FSTTCS
2010
Springer

Lower bounds for Quantum Oblivious Transfer

13 years 10 months ago
Lower bounds for Quantum Oblivious Transfer
Oblivious transfer is a fundamental primitive in cryptography. While perfect information theoretic security is impossible, quantum oblivious transfer protocols can limit the dishonest players' cheating. Finding the optimal security parameters in such protocols is an important open question. In this paper we show that every 1-out-of-2 oblivious transfer protocol allows a dishonest party to cheat with probability bounded below by a constant strictly larger than 1/2. Alice's cheating is defined as her probability of guessing Bob's index, and Bob's cheating is defined as his probability of guessing both input bits of Alice. In our proof, we relate these cheating probabilities to the cheating probabilities of a coin flipping protocol and conclude by using Kitaev's coin flipping lower bound. Then, we present an oblivious transfer protocol with two messages and cheating probabilities at most 3/4. Last, we extend Kitaev's semidefinite programming formulation to m...
André Chailloux, Iordanis Kerenidis, Jamie
Added 11 Feb 2011
Updated 11 Feb 2011
Type Journal
Year 2010
Where FSTTCS
Authors André Chailloux, Iordanis Kerenidis, Jamie Sikora
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