sasha
sasha.place
sasha
@sasha.place
PhD Student at UMD studying Cryptography
website: sasha.place
Formerly at Meta/Cornell
Grok research mode is the only one that was ever free and none of the queries I ran were more useful than regular LLM conversation. it would just make the same types of mistakes as a regular LLM and then run with them for a much longer response.
December 11, 2025 at 4:16 PM
this is more than 100 GB of public parameters! this is so rage inducing since it's a rebuttal response and there's no way to respond. also i feel like i've seen this misconception in the SNARK space a few times that cq/lasso are complete magic and have no drawbacks whatsoever.
December 8, 2025 at 4:35 PM
i was just telling people after the ICLR drama that none of the reviews I've gotten so far seemed to be AI generated :(
December 4, 2025 at 8:41 PM
i do think that somebody can make a pivot to work in quantum computing after college. that being said, i think that somebody 15 years out of college, with a family and house, will probably not be reading textbooks or deep theory papers. there should be better ways of evaluating expertise here!
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
there are whole communities on other websites of people discussing investing 10s of thousands of dollars into companies like IONQ with such tenuous understandings of how quantum computing actually works. i find it kind of sad.
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
there just isn't a great platform to fight back against these claims. it also doesn't help that a few quantum computing companies participated in the SPAC boom and now have armies of fans on social media repeating these claims.
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
i don't know how to solve this! businesses keep hiring quantum consultants who don't really know what they're talking about. the "BS hype" side of quantum computing has a way bigger platform than the more conservative academic side of the field.
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
this has led to a quantum industry with an insane amount of BS. claims like "quantum computing will revolutionize logistics and finance" or "AES-128 is in imminent danger of being cracked by a quantum computer" are widely accepted even though there just isn't evidence for this.
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
when I went to RWPQC (a conference about post-quantum crypto) I saw a bunch of people in category 1 of varying quality, and a few people who i'm pretty sure were in category 2.
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
the result is: there are a lot of "quantum consultants" with surprisingly shitty understandings of these subjects.
At best, you have a traditional security person who made a mid-late career pivot to quantum, and at worst, you have people who are more or less just grifters.
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
however, quantum computing and post-quantum crypto are pretty rare skills. Many universities don't offer courses on these topics, and they weren't that widely taken at both universities that i attended. people who take these classes are at the top of the class and typically don't go into consulting
October 15, 2025 at 2:28 PM
1) I've seen people bring up "KZG for multilinear polynomials" or "Multilinear KZG" a few times, but they weren't quite sure what it is or where it comes from. It originates in this 2011 paper called "Signatures of Correct Computation" (eprint.iacr.org/2011/587.pdf) and is sometimes also called PST.
eprint.iacr.org
October 5, 2025 at 2:07 PM
CONIKS: Bringing Key Transparency to End Use (eprint.iacr.org/2014/1004.pdf). I spent a few months reading key transparency papers and I think this is the best one. It's easy to read and well thought out. If you've seen CONIKs before, I think SEEMless is another fun one (eprint.iacr.org/2018/607).
eprint.iacr.org
August 29, 2025 at 6:09 PM
Justin Thaler's textbook on zero-knowledge proofs (people.cs.georgetown.edu/jthaler/Proo...). This textbook spends the first 7 chapters on sumcheck stuff, which may be intimidating. However, it has the best-written explanations for a lot of stuff and you can read the non-sumcheck stuff separately.
people.cs.georgetown.edu
August 29, 2025 at 6:09 PM
Nova: Recursive Zero-Knowledge Arguments
from Folding Schemes (eprint.iacr.org/2021/370.pdf). This paper is super readable and introduces a hot current idea in zk-SNARK research!
eprint.iacr.org
August 29, 2025 at 6:09 PM