Affiliation:
1. Virginia Tech
2. California Institute of Technology
3. University of Maryland
4. College Park
5. Télécom Paris
Abstract
Self-testing is the task where spatially separated Alice and Bob cooperate to deduce the inner workings of untrusted quantum devices by interacting with them in a classical manner. We examine the task above where Alice and Bob do not trust each other which we call adversarial self-testing. We show that adversarial self-testing implies secure sampling—a simpler task that we introduce where distrustful Alice and Bob wish to sample from a joint probability distribution with the guarantee that an honest party's marginal is not biased. By extending impossibility results in two-party quantum cryptography, we give a simple proof that both of these tasks are impossible in all but trivial settings.
Published by the American Physical Society
2024
Funder
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative
U.S. Department of Defense
European Commission
Commonwealth Cyber Initiative
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Publisher
American Physical Society (APS)