The NSA is preparing a Quantum Computer to crack all kind of encryption
http://www.techpopups.blogspot.com/ |
New documents leaked by Edward Snowden reveal two NSA
programs that seek to build a “useful quantum computer” that can break all
known forms of classical encryption. Such a quantum computer would obviously
give the NSA unprecedented access to encrypted communications, but a working
quantum computer is also vital for defensive purposes: If someone else gets
their hands on a quantum computer first, then it is the US government that will
suddenly have all of its encrypted communications cracked wide open.
According to the documents leaked by Snowden and published
by The Washington Post, there are at least two programs that deal with quantum
computers and their use in breaking classical encryption — “Penetrating Hard
Targets” and “Owning the Net.” The first program, Penetrating Hard Targets, is
funded to the tune of $79.7 million and includes efforts to build “a
cryptologically useful quantum computer” that can “sustain and enhance research
operations at NSA/CSS Washington locations, including the Laboratory for
Physical Sciences facility in College
Park , MD. ” The second
program, Owning the Net, deals with developing new methods of intercepting
communications, including the use of quantum computers to break encryption.
(Read: Move over, quantum cryptography: Classical physics can be unbreakable
too.)
http://www.techpopups.blogspot.com/ |
As always with Snowden’s leaks, it’s not actually surprising
that the NSA is working on quantum computing and cryptography, but it’s still a
bit weird to see its plans laid bare. The mathematical, cryptographical, and
quantum mechanical communities have long known that quantum computing should be
able to crack classical encryption very easily. To crack RSA, the world’s
prevailing cryptosystem, you need to be able to factor prime numbers — a task
that is very difficult with a normal, classical-physics CPU, but might be very
easy for a quantum computer. We say “might” because no one has built a fully
functioning multi-qubit quantum computer yet — and that’s why there’s so much
attention on who will build the first cryptographically useful quantum
computer.
As for when we might actually see the first useful quantum
computer, I would put my money on “the next five years.” We are now getting to
the point where coherence on a single-qubit level is not so much of an issue,
allowing researchers to move onto the trickier topic of stringing multiple
fully entangled qubits together, and the necessary error checking/fault
tolerance measures that go along with multi-qubit setups. From what it’s
published so far, the Laboratory for Physical Sciences, which is carrying out
the NSA’s quantum computing work under contract, doesn’t seem to be leading the
pack in terms of building a quantum computer. IBM, with its superconducting
waveguide-cavity qubits, appears to be closer to realizing a quantum computer.
http://www.techpopups.blogspot.com/ |
Despite Snowden’s leak, then, it is at least somewhat
comforting that the NSA doesn’t appear to be ahead of the rest of the industry.
In reality, something like a working quantum computer would be so hugely
significant that it would be impossible for the NSA to develop it internally
and keep it a secret. In short, even if the NSA does develop a quantum computer
to intercept all of your encrypted communications, there will almost certainly
be other international actors with quantum computers that will keep the US government
in check.
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