Securing HHL Quantum Algorithm against Quantum Computer Attacks
October 10, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Proceedings of the 14th International Workshop on Hardware and Architectural Support for Security and Privacy
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Authors
Yizhuo Tan, Hrvoje Kukina, Jakub Szefer
arXiv ID
2410.08010
Category
cs.CR: Cryptography & Security
Cross-listed
quant-ph
Citations
0
Venue
Proceedings of the 14th International Workshop on Hardware and Architectural Support for Security and Privacy
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
As the quantum research community expands and new quantum algorithms are created and implemented, it is essential to consider the security implications and potential threats that could lead to the compromise the information processed by them. This work focuses on securing the HHL quantum algorithm against attacks while it executes on a quantum computer. Specifically, two types of potential attacks could be deployed on a cloud-based quantum computer by an attacker circuit attempting to interfere with the victim HHL circuit: the Improper Initialization Attack (IIA) and the Higher Energy Attack (HEA). To protect the HHL algorithm from IIA and HEA, this work proposes first-of-a-kind defense strategies against these attacks on the HHL quantum algorithm. Next, this work demonstrates an implementation of a new quantum circuit for the HHL quantum algorithm that incorporates these defenses. The redesigned quantum circuit is necessary to successfully apply and realize all proposed defense strategies. Finally, this work illustrates how these defense strategies function in practice in the redesigned circuit, specifically how they can protect the HHL quantum algorithm from both IIA and HEA across multiple qubits involving all three types of qubits used in the HHL algorithms: ancilla, clock, and b. The defense requires minimal modification to the circuit, and has only a very small effect on the fidelity of the circuits. The circuits have been tested and validated in both simulation, and also on real IBM quantum computer hardware. The work further analyzes how the modified HHL circuit with the defenses is affected by noise during quantum computation. This work in the end demonstrates that it is practical to add protections to quantum circuits so that they not only perform correct computation, but also self-detect if an attack has occured during the execution.
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