Quantum cryptography – using a private communication channel to lock down the exchange of sensitive data between two points – has to date created much more discussion than it has practical applications. However, with scientists, researchers and academics already on the case, it could be just five years until the technology hits the mainstream. . Martin Illsley, director of Accenture Research Labs, said that the rate of increase in computing power means that existing methods of cryptography are getting ever easier to crack, given more computing power means hackers can put more and more processing muscle into unlocking the random combinations that keep data transfer secure: "As computing increases in power, people are increasingly able to do that," he said. The link for this article located at Silicon.com is no longer available. . Martin Illsley, director of Accenture Research Labs, said that the rate of increase in computing pow. quantum, cryptography, using, private, communication, channel, exchange, sensitiv. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Imagine, if you will, a means of delivering encryption keys that is so secure that it's impossible to break because doing so would violate the laws of physics. In other words, the delivery method is so secure, it's protected by the very fabric of the universe.. . .. Imagine, if you will, a means of delivering encryption keys that is so secure that it's impossible to break because doing so would violate the laws of physics. In other words, the delivery method is so secure, it's protected by the very fabric of the universe. If that doesn't get your attention, think about this: What Dr. Hughes is working with is a way to encode information on individual photons. He then sends these encoded photons to a receiver that can measure their characteristics and determine from those characteristics the data that the encoding represents. That's right: He's imprinting information on individual subatomic particles. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Imagine, if you will, a means of delivering encryption keys that is so secure that it's impossible t. imagine, means, delivering, encryption, secure, impossible. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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