Journal Article10.1364/oe.537325
Light-injection attack against practical continuous-variable measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution systems
Yiliang Wang,Yi Zheng,Chenlei Fang,Haobin Shi,Wei Pan +4 more
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TL;DR: This study investigates the practical security of continuous-variable measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution systems against light-injection attacks, revealing a security loophole that allows Eve to obtain secret key information, and proposes countermeasures to enhance system security.
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Abstract: Continuous-variable measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution (CV-MDI QKD) can defend all detection-side attacks effectively. Therefore, the source side is the final battlefield for performing quantum hacking attacks. This paper investigates the practical security of a CV-MDI QKD system under a light-injection attack. Here, we first describe two different light-injection attacks, i.e., the induced-photorefractive attack and the strong-power injection attack. Then, we consider three attack cases where Eve only attacks one of the parties or both parties of the CV-MDI QKD system. Based on the analysis of the parameter estimation, we find that the legitimate communication parties will overestimate the secret key rate of the system under the effect of a light-injection attack. This opens a security loophole for Eve to successfully obtain secret key information in a practical CV-MDI QKD system. In particular, compared to the laser-damage attack, the above attacks use a lower power of injected light and have a more serious effect on the security of the system. To eliminate the above effects, we can enhance the practical security of the system by doping the lithium niobate material with various impurities or by using protective devices, such as optical isolators, circulators, optical power limiters, and narrow-band filters. Apart from these, we can also use an intensity monitor or a photodetector to detect the light-injection attack.
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Citations
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TL;DR: This review focuses on continuous-variable quantum information processes that rely on any combination of Gaussian states, Gaussian operations, and Gaussian measurements, including quantum communication, quantum cryptography, quantum computation, quantum teleportation, and quantum state and channel discrimination.
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Valerio Scarani,Helle Bechmann-Pasquinucci,Nicolas J. Cerf,Miloslav Dušek,Norbert Lütkenhaus,Momtchil Peev +5 more
TL;DR: Essential theoretical tools that have been developed to assess the security of the main experimental platforms are presented (discrete- variable, continuous-variable, and distributed-phase-reference protocols).
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Peter W. Shor,John Preskill +1 more
TL;DR: It is proved that the 1984 protocol of Bennett and Brassard (BB84) for quantum key distribution is secure, and a key distribution protocol based on entanglement purification is given, which can be proven secure using methods from Lo and Chau's proof of security for a similar protocol.