Card-Based Physical Zero-Knowledge Proof For Kakuro

IEICE TRANSACTIONS ON FUNDAMENTALS OF ELECTRONICS COMMUNICATIONS AND COMPUTER SCIENCES(2019)

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摘要
Kakuro is a popular logic puzzle, in which a player fills in all empty squares with digits from 1 to 9 so that the sum of digits in each (horizontal or vertical) line is equal to a given number, called a clue, and digits in each line are all different. In 2016, Bultel, Dreier, Dumas, and Lafourcade proposed a physical zero-knowledge proof protocol for Kakuro using a deck of cards; their proposed protocol enables a prover to convince a verifier that the prover knows the solution of a Kakuro puzzle without revealing any information about the solution. One possible drawback of their protocol would be that the protocol is not perfectly extractable, implying that a prover who does not know the solution can convince a verifier with a small probability; therefore, one has to repeat the protocol to make such an error become negligible. In this paper, to overcome this, we design zero-knowledge proof protocols for Kakuro having perfect extractability property. Our improvement relies on the ideas behind the copy protocols in the field of card-based cryptography. By executing our protocols with a real deck of physical playing cards, humans can practically perform an efficient zero-knowledge proof of knowledge for Kakuro.
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关键词
cryptography, card-based protocols, real-life hands-on cryptography, Kakuro, physical zero-knowledge proof
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