Interactive communication of knowledge from the point of view of resource-bounded computational complexity is studied. Extending the work of Goldwasser, Micali, and Rackof [Proc. 17th Annual ACM Symposium on the Theory of Computing, 1985, pp. 291““304; .,18 (1989), pp. 186““208], the authors define a protocol transferring the result of any fixed computation to be minimum-knowledge if it communicates no additional knowledge to the recipient besides the intended computational result. It is proved that such protocols may be combined in a natural way so as to build more complex protocols. A protocol is introduced for two parties, a prover and a verifier, with the following properties:(1) Following the protocol, the prover gives to the verifier ...