Impossibility of Growing Quantum Bit Commitments
Quantum Physics
2011-09-28 v2
Abstract
Quantum key distribution (QKD) is often, more correctly, called key growing. Given a short key as a seed, QKD enables two parties, connected by an insecure quantum channel, to generate a secret key of arbitrary length. Conversely, no key agreement is possible without access to an initial key. Here, we consider another fundamental cryptographic task, commitments. While, similar to key agreement, commitments cannot be realized from scratch, we ask whether they may be grown. That is, given the ability to commit to a fixed number of bits, is there a way to augment this to commitments to strings of arbitrary length? Using recently developed information-theoretic techniques, we answer this question to the negative.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1105.1165,
title = {Impossibility of Growing Quantum Bit Commitments},
author = {Severin Winkler and Marco Tomamichel and Stefan Hengl and Renato Renner},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1105.1165},
year = {2011}
}
Comments
10 pages, minor changes