Paper 2025/731
The Sponge is Quantum Indifferentiable
Abstract
The sponge is a cryptographic construction that turns a public permutation into a hash function. When instantiated with the Keccak permutation, the sponge forms the NIST SHA-3 standard. SHA-3 is a core component of most post-quantum public-key cryptography schemes slated for worldwide adoption. While one can consider many security properties for the sponge, the ultimate one is \emph{indifferentiability from a random oracle}, or simply \emph{indifferentiability}. The sponge was proved indifferentiable against classical adversaries by Bertoni et al. in 2008. Despite significant efforts in the years since, little is known about sponge security against quantum adversaries, even for simple properties like preimage or collision resistance beyond a single round. This is primarily due to the lack of a satisfactory quantum analog of the lazy sampling technique for permutations. In this work, we develop a specialized technique that overcomes this barrier in the case of the sponge. We prove that the sponge is in fact indifferentiable from a random oracle against quantum adversaries. Our result establishes that the domain extension technique behind SHA-3 is secure in the post-quantum setting. Our indifferentiability bound for the sponge is a loose $O(\mathsf{poly}(q) 2^{-\min(r, c)/4})$, but we also give bounds on preimage and collision resistance that are tighter.
Metadata
- Available format(s)
-
PDF
- Category
- Foundations
- Publication info
- Preprint.
- Keywords
- QuantumSpongeIndifferentiability
- Contact author(s)
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galagic @ umd edu
jcarolan @ umd edu
chmaj @ dtu dk
salto @ dtu dk - History
- 2025-04-24: approved
- 2025-04-23: received
- See all versions
- Short URL
- https://ia.cr/2025/731
- License
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CC BY
BibTeX
@misc{cryptoeprint:2025/731, author = {Gorjan Alagic and Joseph Carolan and Christian Majenz and Saliha Tokat}, title = {The Sponge is Quantum Indifferentiable}, howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2025/731}, year = {2025}, url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2025/731} }