Encryption with weakly random keys using quantum ciphertext
(pp0395-0403)
Jan
Bouda, Matej Pivoluska, and Martin Plesch
doi:
https://doi.org/10.26421/QIC12.5-6-2
Abstracts:
The lack of perfect randomness can cause significant problems in
securing communication between two parties. McInnes and Pinkas [13]
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.
Key words:
Weak randomness, Quantum cryptography |