Quantum vault stores token copies at the bank to enable secure authentication without classical side information, achieving false-negative errors below 10^{-4} and attack success below 10^{-18} for 200-token bills on IBMQ hardware.
Quantum Vault: Secure Token Authentication Without Classical State Information Benchmarked on IBMQ
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abstract
Quantum tokens are underlying primitives for quantum money and network proposals, which leverage the no-cloning theorem to realize unforgeable authentication. A relevant but overlooked type of attack to such architectures is a hacker that steals the classical side information of the token states from the issuing agent (e.g. a bank), allowing the forgery of fake tokens without violating no-cloning theorem. Our proposal avoids this threat by removing classical side information about the token states, where instead a copy of the token is stored at the bank, i.e. a quantum vault. This copy can be accessed by anyone to perform authentication, consuming the token pair in the process. Our protocol is benchmarked and quality parameters are identified within a hardware agnostic framework employing three cloud-based IBM quantum (IBMQ) processors, such that the protocol is applicable to arbitrary quantum platforms. By comparing the efficiency with which genuine tokens are produced and authenticated with a possible query attack scenario, we demonstrate the security of the protocol. Where we achieve probabilities lower than $10^{-4}$ for false-negative errors and $10^{-18}$ for successful attacks when considering quantum bills composed of 200 tokens, even in the worst performing hardware. The quantum vault not only symmetrically protects both user and bank with the same quantum principles, but provides a step towards public key authentication, since any untrusted party can have authentication access granted from the bank to the tokens without being able to clone them, assuming they have a quantum channel with the vault. Besides public accessible verifiability, our proposal naturally achieves standard unforgeability, traceability and revocability.
fields
quant-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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Quantum Vault: Secure Token Authentication Without Classical State Information Benchmarked on IBMQ
Quantum vault stores token copies at the bank to enable secure authentication without classical side information, achieving false-negative errors below 10^{-4} and attack success below 10^{-18} for 200-token bills on IBMQ hardware.