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Communications Encryption

Quantum Network Joins Four People Together For Encrypted Messaging (newscientist.com) 60

An anonymous reader shares a report: The quantum internet is starting small, but growing. Researchers have created a network that lets four users communicate simultaneously through channels secured by the laws of quantum physics, and they say it could easily be scaled up. Soren Wengerowsky at the University of Vienna and his colleagues devised a network that uses quantum key distribution (QKD) to keep messages secure [the link is paywalled]. The general principle of QKD is that two photons are entangled, meaning their quantum properties are linked. Further reading: Nature.
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Quantum Network Joins Four People Together For Encrypted Messaging

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  • by jimtheowl ( 4200185 ) on Thursday December 13, 2018 @02:18PM (#57799320)
    Hello, I am Quantor Prince and have been stranded in entanglement after secret experiment from my captors. I have made causality agreement with guard who is willing to free and not free me for the sum ..
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Hello, I am Quantor Prince and have been stranded in entanglement after secret experiment from my captors. I have made causality agreement with guard who is willing to free and not free me for the sum ..

      Hey! I am willing to and not to pay your sum!

  • by chrism238 ( 657741 ) on Thursday December 13, 2018 @02:26PM (#57799360)
    ARPAnet also started with just four nodes: https://www.scientificamerican... [scientificamerican.com]
    • Probably a coincidence. ARPAnet made a triangular ring, and then had one more node off that. That's enough to test routing, etc. (A connects to B,C; B connects to A,C; C connects to A,B,D). Therefore, they can make sure A->B doesn't get confused and go A->C->A (repeat) ->B and A->D can make the hops. So,. useful for testing.

      This quantum nodes were connected in a ring, all four nodes connected each of the three others. The limit seems to be based on the fact that they had 12 multiplexed

  • You remember what happened, when Alexander Graham Bell added a third phone to his 'network'.
    He was relaxing in his bath when the phone rang. Wet like a dog he hobbled to the phone just do detect the first ever 'wrong number'.

  • It said I had a message. I opened it and it wasn't there!?
  • I knew this because my quantum ai blockchain device from Elon Musk had already told me.

  • At the end of the day this is all still rooted in symmetric encryption. Given todays cost and capability of storage it's just as easy to pre-fill a lifetime supply of "messaging" or voice communications in an OTP pool as it would be to initially provision secret keys in quantum modem doodads to support quantum encryption.

    Only OTP pools are way cheaper and easier.

    Where quantum crypto would be useful is in securing high bandwidth (multi-gigabit) data links.

  • Article is behind a paywalled and I can't find a non-paywalled source, thanks so much for that.
  • No one has ever been able to detail how entangling particles helps anything with regards to encryption or key sharing.

    If you pass out entangled particles to a set of people, all you gain is the ability to know the state of their particle as soon as you look at yours. (And you could have done that at the time you distributed the particles - there's no FTL transfer of information, and no breaking of causality.)

    If you are able to securely pass out entangled particles, you are able to securely pass out convent

    • If you pass out entangled particles to a set of people, all you gain is the ability to know the state of their particle as soon as you look at yours. (And you could have done that at the time you distributed the particles - there's no FTL transfer of information, and no breaking of causality.)

      If you are able to securely pass out entangled particles, you are able to securely pass out convention particles describing a conventional key.
      If you are not able to securely pass out entangled particles, you're not gonna do much, are you?

      The point of quantum crypto is disconnecting future keys from observable reality.

      Assume an adversary was able to record all communications and they kept them forever.

      With the information collected they may eventually find a way to derive initial encryption keys either by stealing, brute force or leveraging cryptographic weaknesses and in-turn use that information to help facilitate future breakage of key rotation/management schemes designed to reinforce initial encryption keys.

      What quantum crypto does is pr

  • Quantum Network Joins Four People Together

    That headline summary sounds like a bad SyFy reboot of The Fly.

    With Stan Winston gone I'm not sure it could be done properly.

  • Researchers have created a network ... and could easily be scaled up. ... devised a network that uses quantum key distribution (QKD) to keep messages secure [the link is paywalled].

    Lawyers created secure networks that decades ago. If you don't pay ("the link is paywalled") you can't see the message. Or if you DO see, you have to poke your eyes out. (You've seen those email trailers from some companies: intended for; if not then you are restricted from [breathing] ...)

    Besides, TERRORISTS, and "Here's a $5 wrench, go find out what he knows."

  • The only way four people can keep a quantum secret is if three of them are dead, or a quantum superposition of alive and dead.
    The death certificates will say "Cause of death: wavefunction collapse."

  • What's the porn like on that network?

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