Security of the Fiat-Shamir Transformation in the Quantum Random-Oracle Model

Authors
Publication date 2019
Host editors
  • A. Boldyreva
  • D. Micciancio
Book title Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO 2019
Book subtitle 39th Annual International Cryptology Conference, Santa Barbara, CA, USA, August 18–22, 2019 : proceedings
ISBN
  • 9783030269500
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9783030269517
Series Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Event 39th Annual International Cryptology Conference, CRYPTO 2019
Volume | Issue number 2
Pages (from-to) 356-383
Number of pages 28
Publisher Cham: Springer
Organisations
  • Interfacultary Research - Institute for Logic, Language and Computation (ILLC)
Abstract

The famous Fiat-Shamir transformation turns any public-coin three-round interactive proof, i.e., any so-called Σ-protocol, into a non-interactive proof in the random-oracle model. We study this transformation in the setting of a quantum adversary that in particular may query the random oracle in quantum superposition.

Our main result is a generic reduction that transforms any quantum dishonest prover attacking the Fiat-Shamir transformation in the quantum random-oracle model into a similarly successful quantum dishonest prover attacking the underlying Σ-protocol (in the standard model). Applied to the standard soundness and proof-of-knowledge definitions, our reduction implies that both these security properties, in both the computational and the statistical variant, are preserved under the Fiat-Shamir transformation even when allowing quantum attacks. Our result improves and completes the partial results that have been known so far, but it also proves wrong certain claims made in the literature.

In the context of post-quantum secure signature schemes, our results imply that for any Σ-protocol that is a proof-of-knowledge against quantum dishonest provers (and that satisfies some additional natural properties), the corresponding Fiat-Shamir signature scheme is secure in the quantum random-oracle model. For example, we can conclude that the non-optimized version of Fish, which is the bare Fiat-Shamir variant of the NIST candidate Picnic, is secure in the quantum random-oracle model.

Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-26951-7_13
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85071416782
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