Towards an Antivirus for Quantum Computers
Jun 27, 2022·
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0 min read
Sanjay deshpande
Chuanqi Xu
Theodoros trochatos
Yongshan ding
Jakub szefer
Abstract
Researchers are today exploring models for cloud-based usage of quantum computers where multi-tenancy can be used to share quantum computer hard-ware among multiple users. Multi-tenancy has a promise of allowing better utilization of the quantum computer hardware, but also opens up the quantum computer to new types of security attacks. As this and other recent research shows, it is possible to perform a fault injection attack using crosstalk on quantum computers when a victim and attacker circuits are instantiated as co-tenants on the same quantum computer. To ensure such attacks do not happen, this paper proposes that new techniques should be developed to help catch malicious circuits before they are loaded onto quantum computer hardware. Following ideas from classical computers, a compile-time technique can be designed to scan quantum computer programs for mali-cious or suspicious code patterns before they are compiled into quantum circuits that run on a quantum computer. This paper presents ongoing work which demonstrates how crosstalk can affect Grover’s algorithm, and then presents suggestions of how quantum programs could be analyzed to catch circuits that generate large amounts of crosstalk with malicious intent.
Type
Publication
IEEE International Symposium on Hardware Oriented Security and Trust (HOST)
Authors

Authors
Chuanqi Xu
(he/him)
Research Scientist
I am a Research Scientist at Meta working on Meta’s Generative Ads Recommendation Model (GEM). My focus is on designing and implementing novel transfer learning paradigms to amplify the impact of foundation models within production environments. Additionally, I am working on optimizing the efficiency and performance of GEM’s ecosystem.
Previously, I earned my PhD at Yale University. My research there sat at the intersection of quantum computing and security, where I designed novel attacks and defenses for quantum computers. Before this, I completed my undergraduate studies at University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), where I studied and researched on theoretical and computational condensed matter physics.
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Authors
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