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Usually, a proof of a theorem contains more knowledge than the mere fact that the theorem is true. For instance, to prove that a graph is Hamiltonian it suffices to exhibit a Hamiltonian tour in it; however, this seems to contain more knowledge than the single bit Hamiltonian/non-Hamiltonian. In this paper a computational complexity theory of the “knowledge” contained in a proof is developed. Zero-knowledge proofs are defined as those proofs that convey no additional knowledge other than the correctness of the proposition in question. Examples of zero-knowledge proof systems are given for the languages of quadratic residuosity and 'quadratic nonresiduosity. These are the first examples of zero-knowledge proofs for languages not known to be efficiently recognizable.
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Shafi Goldwasser
Berkeley College
Silvio Micali
Akamai (United States)
Charles Rackoff
University of Toronto
SIAM Journal on Computing
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
University of Toronto
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Goldwasser et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69001fe6bc792ed11ff3021d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1137/0218012
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