DocumentCode :
2574105
Title :
Temporary assumptions - quantum and classical
Author :
Müller-Quade, Jörn
Author_Institution :
Fakultat fur Informatik, Univ. Karlsruhe
fYear :
2005
fDate :
19-19 Oct. 2005
Firstpage :
31
Lastpage :
33
Abstract :
Long-term security is achieved by protocols which use computational assumptions only during the execution of the protocol and become information theoretically secure afterwards. Coin flipping protocols and zero knowledge arguments are examples for protocols achieving long-term security. In this work we consider this regime between computational security and information theoretic security. A security model for long-term security is sketched and the class K of all two argument functions which can be computed with long-term security is characterised. Furthermore it is shown that the class Q of all two argument functions which can be computed using quantum cryptography is strictly contained in K. The characterisation of K is a generalisation of a result of Kushilevitz (1992), where he characterises the two argument functions which can securely be computed in presence of an unbounded passive adversary. The result in the quantum case additionally relies on the impossibility results of (D. Mayers, 1997) , (H.-K. Lo and H. R Chau, 1996) and the impossibility of quantum coin flipping result of Kitaev which is published in (A. Ambainis et al., 2004)
Keywords :
information theory; quantum cryptography; security of data; coin flipping protocols; computational assumptions; computational security; information theoretic security; quantum coin flipping; quantum cryptography; zero knowledge arguments; Cryptography; Information security; Protocols; Quantum computing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Theory and Practice in Information-Theoretic Security, 2005. IEEE Information Theory Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Awaji Island
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9491-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ITWTPI.2005.1543952
Filename :
1543952
Link To Document :
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