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erronis

(15,338 posts)
Thu Apr 11, 2024, 11:05 AM Apr 11

New advances promise secure quantum computing at home -- phys.org

https://phys.org/news/2024-04-advances-quantum-home.html

This is basically describing a technology that would allow people to control their own data while using computing power in the cloud. Currently we are required to upload (albeit perhaps invisibly) our information to the cloud for processing. This includes personal information (PII, PHI), financials, documents, etc.

The full power of next-generation quantum computing could soon be harnessed by millions of individuals and companies, thanks to a breakthrough by scientists at Oxford University Physics guaranteeing security and privacy. This advance promises to unlock the transformative potential of cloud-based quantum computing and is detailed in a new study published in Physical Review Letters. The paper is titled "Verifiable blind quantum computing with trapped ions and single photons."

Quantum computing is developing rapidly, paving the way for new applications that could transform services in many areas like health care and financial services. It works in a fundamentally different way than conventional computing and is potentially far more powerful. However, it currently requires controlled conditions to remain stable and there are concerns around data authenticity and the effectiveness of current security and encryption systems.

...
"Never in history have the issues surrounding privacy of data and code been more urgently debated than in the present era of cloud computing and artificial intelligence," said Professor David Lucas. "As quantum computers become more capable, people will seek to use them with complete security and privacy over networks, and our new results mark a step change in capability in this respect."

The results could ultimately lead to commercial development of devices to plug into laptops, to safeguard data when people are using quantum cloud computing services.
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bucolic_frolic

(43,302 posts)
1. The first thing quantum computing needs to do is define itself without use of the word quantum
Thu Apr 11, 2024, 11:13 AM
Apr 11

I've been reading for ten minutes and all I learned was it's below the level of individual atoms, there's lots of data, but not much else.

erronis

(15,338 posts)
2. There are tons of articles about this "quantum" stuff but it does tend to be very academic
Thu Apr 11, 2024, 11:20 AM
Apr 11

and not easily absorbed by us mere mortals who are used to the more Newtonian world.

The main driver of this technology, if I understand it at all, is that information can be transmitted via entangled particles so that a change at one end (say your desktop) of the pipeline causes a near-instant change at the other (say the computing server).

I haven't read this but it popped up at the top of my search results:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement

caraher

(6,279 posts)
3. Entanglement matters but it's not exactly that information is transmitted instantaneously
Sat Apr 13, 2024, 12:25 AM
Apr 13

There are correlations that change basically instantaneously but it's a well-known result in the field that you cannot use those changes to transmit information.

What quantum computing does allow is for a sort of supercharged parallelism that, for example, allows for new algorithms such that the way the computational time scales differently with the size of the computational task.

The headline is vastly over-hyped; this is a proof of principle experiment that remains quite a way off from applications. Not to say that it isn't an important step... just don't expect to use this technology anytime soon

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