We study the total quantum dimension in the thermodynamic limit of topologically
ordered systems. In particular, using the anyons (or superselection sectors) of such
models, we define a secret sharing scheme, storing information invisible to a malicious
party, and argue that the total quantum dimension quantifies how well we can perform this
task. We then argue that this can be made mathematically rigorous using the index theory of
subfactors, originally due to Jones and later extended by Kosaki and Longo. This theory
provides us with a "relative entropy" of two von Neumann algebras and a quantum channel,
and we argue how these can be used to quantify how much classical information two parties
can hide form an adversary. We also review the total quantum dimension in finite systems,
in particular how it relates to topological entanglement entropy. It is known that the
latter also has an interpretation in terms of secret sharing schemes, although this is
shown by completely different methods from ours. Our work provides a different and
independent take on this, which at the same time is completely mathematically rigorous.
This complementary point of view might be beneficial, for example, when studying the
stability of the total quantum dimension when the system is perturbed.