Paper 2025/250

The Round Complexity of Black-Box Post-Quantum Secure Computation

Rohit Chatterjee, National University of Singapore
Xiao Liang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Omkant Pandey, Stony Brook University
Takashi Yamakawa, NTT Social Informatics Laboratories
Abstract

We study the round-complexity of secure multi-party computation (MPC) in the post-quantum regime where honest parties and communication channels are classical but the adversary can be a quantum machine. Our focus is on the fully black-box setting where both the construction as well as the security reduction are black-box in nature. In this context, Chia, Chung, Liu, and Yamakawa [FOCS'22] demonstrated the infeasibility of achieving standard simulation-based security within constant rounds, unless . This outcome leaves crucial feasibility questions unresolved. Specifically, it remains unknown whether black-box constructions are achievable within polynomial rounds; additionally, the existence of constant-round constructions with respect to -, a relaxed yet useful alternative to the standard simulation notion, remains unestablished. This work provides positive answers to the aforementioned questions. We introduce the first black-box construction for post-quantum MPC in polynomial rounds, from the minimal assumption of post-quantum semi-honest oblivious transfers. In the two-party scenario, our construction requires only rounds. These results have already found application in the oracle separation between classical-communication quantum MPC and in the recent work of Kretschmer, Qian, and Tal [STOC'25]. As for -simulation, Chia, Chung, Liang, and Yamakawa [CRYPTO'22] resolved the issue for the two-party setting, leaving the general multi-party setting as an open question. We complete the picture by presenting the first black-box and constant-round construction in the multi-party setting. Our construction can be instantiated using various standard post-quantum primitives including lossy public-key encryption, linearly homomorphic public-key encryption, or dense cryptosystems. En route, we obtain a black-box and constant-round post-quantum commitment that achieves a weaker version of the standard 1-many non-malleability, from the minimal assumption of post-quantum one-way functions. Besides its utility in our post-quantum MPC construction, this commitment scheme also reduces the assumption used in the lower bound of quantum parallel repetition recently established by Bostanci, Qian, Spooner, and Yuen [STOC'24]. We anticipate that it will find more applications in the future.

Note: Added information about grants.

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Foundations
Publication info
Preprint.
Keywords
Multi-Party ComputationPost-QuantumNon-MalleabilityBlack-BoxRound Complexity
Contact author(s)
rochat @ nus edu sg
xiaoliang @ cuhk edu hk
omkant @ cs stonybrook edu
takashi yamakawa @ ntt com
History
2025-02-26: revised
2025-02-17: received
See all versions
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2025/250
License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
CC BY-NC-ND

BibTeX

@misc{cryptoeprint:2025/250,
      author = {Rohit Chatterjee and Xiao Liang and Omkant Pandey and Takashi Yamakawa},
      title = {The Round Complexity of Black-Box Post-Quantum Secure Computation},
      howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2025/250},
      year = {2025},
      url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2025/250}
}
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