First Secure Quantum Crypto Network Up and Running
John Lam was one of many readers to send in news that on Thursday, "at a conference in Vienna, Austria, as reported by the BBC, a European Community science working group built a quantum backbone using 200-km of standard commercial optical fiber running among seven sites and successfully demonstrated the first secure quantum cryptographic key distribution network. In addition, each of the seven links used a different kind of quantum encryption, demonstrating interoperability between the technologies. To paraphrase, the project focused on the trusted repeater paradigm and developed an architecture allowing seamless integration of heterogeneous quantum-key distribution-link devices in a unified framework. Network node-modules managing all classical communication tasks provide the underlying quantum devices with authentic classical channels. The node-module architecture uses a layered model to provision network-wide, end-to-end, provably secure key distribution."
from TFA "Albert Einstein, who discovered the quantum properties of photons of light - indeed, discovered the very concept of the photon - always resisted quantum theory's spooky behaviour, "God does not play dice", being among his oft-quoted objections.
But experiments eventually proved that he apparently does, and also laid the technical foundations for today's quantum information revolution - cryptography, teleportation, and computation."
Teleportation? Did I miss something here? Has matter been teleported or is this just speculation?
"Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
I've always wondered what type of encryption was used in Star Trek episodes when it was announced that there was an encrypted subspace channel for Picard.
I heard something about this on the radio last night (wasn't paying full attention).
But they were talking about quantum key exchange. Assuming that they're then using a standard symmetric key to encrypt the link it's still theoretically breakable, just the key exchange that isn't.
If they're quantum encrypting all the data then that's pretty astonishing - they were talking about video-conferencing so they need a reasonable bit rate and the fidelity rate has to be above 5/6[1] otherwise the link might be vulnerable to a quantum cloning attack.
[1] Assuming the best attack is a universal quantum cloning machine. The maximum theoretical fidelity isn't known for most non-universal quantum cloning machines (but is trivially known for some - e.g. 3/4 for a naive measure and retransmit). I don't know whether it's possible to prove that the 5/6 is a sufficient lower bound on the fidelity.
Tim.
God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
Yeah, but the same crypto that allows digital signatures also allows secure key exchange.
In other words, although this is an impressive achievement, it isn't clear to me that there's any practical application as yet. Particularly when we consider that modern crypto is almost certainly secure, so that intercepting the bits en route is pointless, and that you don't need crypto over a physically secure route.
Quantum computation and communications may well be very useful some year, but 2008 isn't it.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes