Impossibility of Quantum Virtual Black-Box Obfuscation of Classical Circuits

Authors
Publication date 2021
Host editors
  • T. Malkin
  • C. Peikert
Book title Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO 2021
Book subtitle 41st Annual International Cryptology Conference, CRYPTO 2021, virtual event, August 16–20, 2021 : proceedings
ISBN
  • 9783030842413
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9783030842420
Series Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Event 41st Annual International Cryptology Conference, CRYPTO 2021
Volume | Issue number I
Pages (from-to) 497-525
Number of pages 29
Publisher Springer
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Informatics Institute (IVI)
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract

Virtual black-box obfuscation is a strong cryptographic primitive: it encrypts a circuit while maintaining its full input/output functionality. A remarkable result by Barak et al. (Crypto 2001) shows that a general obfuscator that obfuscates classical circuits into classical circuits cannot exist. A promising direction that circumvents this impossibility result is to obfuscate classical circuits into quantum states, which would potentially be better capable of hiding information about the obfuscated circuit. We show that, under the assumption that Learning With Errors (LWE) is hard for quantum computers, this quantum variant of virtual black-box obfuscation of classical circuits is generally impossible. On the way, we show that under the presence of dependent classical auxiliary input, even the small class of classical point functions cannot be quantum virtual black-box obfuscated.

Document type Conference contribution
Note With supplementary material.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84242-0_18
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85115154253
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