log in  |  register  |  feedback?  |  help  |  web accessibility
Logo
Another Round of Breaking and Making Quantum Money: How to Not Build It from Lattices, and More
Jiahui Liu - University of Texas, Austin
Wednesday, April 26, 2023, 11:00 am-12:00 pm Calendar
  • You are subscribed to this talk through .
  • You are watching this talk through .
  • You are subscribed to this talk. (unsubscribe, watch)
  • You are watching this talk. (unwatch, subscribe)
  • You are not subscribed to this talk. (watch, subscribe)
Abstract

Public verification of quantum money has been one of the central objects in quantum cryptography ever since Wiesner's pioneering idea of using quantum mechanics to construct banknotes against counterfeiting. So far, we do not know any publicly-verifiable quantum money scheme that is provably secure from standard assumptions.

In this talk, we provide both negative and positive results for publicly verifiable quantum money.

In the first part, we give a general theorem, showing that a certain natural class of quantum money schemes from lattices cannot be secure. We use this theorem to break the recent quantum money scheme of Khesin, Lu, and Shor.

In the second part, we propose a framework for building quantum money and quantum lightning we call invariant money which abstracts some of the ideas of quantum money from knots by Farhi et al.(ITCS'12). In addition to formalizing this framework, we provide concrete hard computational problems loosely inspired by classical knowledge-of-exponent assumptions, whose hardness would imply the security of quantum lightning, a strengthening of quantum money where not even the bank can duplicate banknotes.

We discuss potential instantiations of our framework, including an oracle construction using cryptographic group actions and instantiations from rerandomizable functional encryption, isogenies over elliptic curves, and knots.

Joint work with Hart Montgomery and Mark Zhandry.

*We strongly encourage attendees to use their full name (and if possible, their UMD credentials) to join the zoom session.*

Join Zoom Meeting

https://umd.zoom.us/j/96537321742?pwd=RjZNd3MzU0FQbVFYVkJSUmZSdGF4UT09

Meeting ID: 965 3732 1742

Passcode: 343749

Dial by your location

+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)

This talk is organized by Andrea F. Svejda