The Fiat–Shamir heuristic is a method used in cryptography to transform interactive proof systems or protocols into non-interactive ones. It was introduced by Adi Shamir and Amos Fiat in 1986. The heuristic allows for the generation of a proof that can be verified without requiring interaction between the prover and the verifier, which is particularly useful in scenarios where interactions might be cumbersome or impractical.

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