scholarly journals Encryption with weakly random keys using quantum ciphertext

2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (5&6) ◽  
pp. 395-403
Author(s):  
Jan Bouda ◽  
Matej Pivoluska ◽  
Martin Plesch

The lack of perfect randomness can cause significant problems in securing communication between two parties. McInnes and Pinkas \cite{McInnesPinkas-ImpossibilityofPrivate-1991} proved that unconditionally secure encryption is impossible when the key is sampled from a weak random source. The adversary can always gain some information about the plaintext, regardless of the cryptosystem design. Most notably, the adversary can obtain full information about the plaintext if he has access to just two bits of information about the source (irrespective on length of the key). In this paper we show that for every weak random source there is a cryptosystem with a classical plaintext, a classical key, and a quantum ciphertext that bounds the adversary's probability $p$ to guess correctly the plaintext strictly under the McInnes-Pinkas bound, except for a single case, where it coincides with the bound. In addition, regardless of the source of randomness, the adversary's probability $p$ is strictly smaller than $1$ as long as there is some uncertainty in the key (Shannon/min-entropy is non-zero). These results are another demonstration that quantum information processing can solve cryptographic tasks with strictly higher security than classical information processing.

Author(s):  
Aleksandar Stojanović

Abstract: This publication put the accent on strategical problems in information transmission. The analysis is based on substantially different structure between classical (bit) and quantum information unit (qubit). The scientific methodology used in this publication is relatively new (single qubit transfer based on no-cloning theorem). Important part of publication is devoted to solving problems where quantum information processing offers much more prolific solutions than classical information processing. From practical point of view, the advances of quantum based information technologies have been presented.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
David P. DiVincenzo ◽  
Charles H. Bennett

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
David G. Cory ◽  
Chandrasekhar Ramanathan ◽  
Raymond Laflamme ◽  
Joseph V. Emerson ◽  
Jonathan Baugh

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jie Su ◽  
Xuchao Guo ◽  
Chengqi Liu ◽  
Shuhan Lu ◽  
Lin Li

AbstractQuantum image representation (QIR) is a necessary part of quantum image processing (QIP) and plays an important role in quantum information processing. To address the problems that NCQI cannot handle images with inconsistent horizontal and vertical position sizes and multi-channel image processing, an improved color digital image quantum representation (INCQI) model based on NCQI is proposed in this paper. The INCQI model can process color images and facilitate multi-channel quantum image transformations and transparency information processing of images using auxiliary quantum bits. In addition, the quantum image control circuit was designed based on INCQI. And quantum image preparation experiments were conducted on IBM Quantum Experience (IBMQ) to verify the feasibility and effectiveness of INCQI quantum image preparation. The prepared image information was obtained by quantum measurement in the experiment, and the visualization of quantum information was successfully realized. The research in this paper has some reference value for the research related to QIP.


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