We study a problem related to coin flipping, coding theory, and noise sensitivity. Consider a source of truly random bits x ∈ {0, 1}n, and k parties, who have noisy version of the source bits yi ∈ {0, 1}n, when for all i and j, it holds that P[ymath image = xj] = 1 − ϵ, independently for all i and j. That is, each party sees each bit correctly with probability 1 − ϵ, and incorrectly (flipped) with probability ϵ, independently for all bits and all parties. The parties, who cannot communicate, wish to agree beforehand on balanced functions fi: {0, 1}n → {0, 1} such that P[f1(y1) = … = fk(yk)] is maximized. In other words, each party wants to toss a fair coin so that the probability that all parties have the same coin is maximized. The functio...
This paper studies the problem of simulating a coin of arbitrary real bias q with a coin of arbitrar...
Coin flipping is one of the most fundamental tasks in cryptographic protocol design. Informally, a c...
International audienceSuppose you want to generate a random sequence of zeros and ones and all you h...
We study a problem related to coin flipping, coding theory, and noise sensitivity. Consider a source...
We address one of the foundational problems in cryptography: the bias of coin- ipping pro-tocols. Co...
Quantum coin flipping is a cryptographic primitive in which two or more parties that do not trust ea...
International audienceThe cryptographic protocol of coin tossing consists of two parties, Alice and ...
Coin-tossing protocols are protocols that generate a random bit with uniform distribution. These pro...
In 1985, Ben-Or and Linial (Advances in Computing Research 1989) introduced the collective coin flip...
AbstractWe present a new protocol and two lower bounds for quantum coin flipping. In our protocol, n...
AbstractWe present a new protocol and two lower bounds for quantum coin flipping. In our protocol, n...
Each classical public-coin protocol for coin flipping is naturally associated with a quantum protoco...
Randomness is everywhere. Do you like to cook? Imagine you’re sauteeing some onions. You’d like each...
We investigate weak coin flipping, a fundamental cryptographic primitive where two distrustful parti...
Coin-flipping is the cryptographic task of generating a random coin-flip between two mistrustful par...
This paper studies the problem of simulating a coin of arbitrary real bias q with a coin of arbitrar...
Coin flipping is one of the most fundamental tasks in cryptographic protocol design. Informally, a c...
International audienceSuppose you want to generate a random sequence of zeros and ones and all you h...
We study a problem related to coin flipping, coding theory, and noise sensitivity. Consider a source...
We address one of the foundational problems in cryptography: the bias of coin- ipping pro-tocols. Co...
Quantum coin flipping is a cryptographic primitive in which two or more parties that do not trust ea...
International audienceThe cryptographic protocol of coin tossing consists of two parties, Alice and ...
Coin-tossing protocols are protocols that generate a random bit with uniform distribution. These pro...
In 1985, Ben-Or and Linial (Advances in Computing Research 1989) introduced the collective coin flip...
AbstractWe present a new protocol and two lower bounds for quantum coin flipping. In our protocol, n...
AbstractWe present a new protocol and two lower bounds for quantum coin flipping. In our protocol, n...
Each classical public-coin protocol for coin flipping is naturally associated with a quantum protoco...
Randomness is everywhere. Do you like to cook? Imagine you’re sauteeing some onions. You’d like each...
We investigate weak coin flipping, a fundamental cryptographic primitive where two distrustful parti...
Coin-flipping is the cryptographic task of generating a random coin-flip between two mistrustful par...
This paper studies the problem of simulating a coin of arbitrary real bias q with a coin of arbitrar...
Coin flipping is one of the most fundamental tasks in cryptographic protocol design. Informally, a c...
International audienceSuppose you want to generate a random sequence of zeros and ones and all you h...