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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! In cryptography, an oblivious transfer protocol (often abbreviated OT) is a protocol by which a sender sends some information to the receiver, but remains oblivious as to what is received. In the early seventies Stephen Wiesner introduced a primitive called multiplexing in his seminal paper "Conjugate Coding", which was the starting point of quantum cryptography. Unfortunately it took more than ten years to be published. Even though this primitive was equivalent to what was later called 1-2 oblivious transfer, Wiesner did not see its application to…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! In cryptography, an oblivious transfer protocol (often abbreviated OT) is a protocol by which a sender sends some information to the receiver, but remains oblivious as to what is received. In the early seventies Stephen Wiesner introduced a primitive called multiplexing in his seminal paper "Conjugate Coding", which was the starting point of quantum cryptography. Unfortunately it took more than ten years to be published. Even though this primitive was equivalent to what was later called 1-2 oblivious transfer, Wiesner did not see its application to cryptography. The first form of oblivious transfer was introduced in 1981 by Michael O. Rabin.