Publication | Open Access
Insecurity of position-based quantum-cryptography protocols against entanglement attacks
70
Citations
22
References
2011
Year
EngineeringInformation SecurityPosition-based Quantum-cryptography ProtocolsQuantum ComputingPost-quantum CryptographyPosition-based Quantum CryptographyQuantum EntanglementQuantum Key DistributionQuantum CryptographyQuantum ScienceQuantum SecurityPhysicsQuantum InformationCryptographyQuantum TeleportationNatural SciencesQuantum ResourceModified SchemeQuantum Communication
Recently, position-based quantum cryptography has been claimed to be unconditionally secure. On the contrary, here we show that the existing proposals for position-based quantum cryptography are, in fact, insecure if entanglement is shared among two adversaries. Specifically, we demonstrate how the adversaries can incorporate ideas of quantum teleportation and quantum secret sharing to compromise the security with certainty. The common flaw to all current protocols is that the Pauli operators always map a codeword to a codeword (up to an irrelevant overall phase). We propose a modified scheme lacking this property in which the same cheating strategy used to undermine the previous protocols can succeed with a rate of at most $85%$. We prove the modified protocol is secure when the shared quantum resource between the adversaries is a two- or three-level system.
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