Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

NatSecEdge
cipherbrief

Welcome! Log in to stay connected and make the most of your experience.

Input clean

Rumbles of the Quantum Computing Revolution in Security

<p>A Strontium atomic clock at the National Physical Laboratory in Teddington, England.</p>

Imagine a sensor that could instantly detect nuclear submarines deep underwater, a supercomputer that can break the strongest encryption in the blink of an eye, or a worldwide satellite network of theoretically unbreakable communications.

These are just a few of the capabilities promised by quantum physics, a century-old science, which found that particles have unique and unexpected properties at the smallest scale. Scientists have long theorized that these properties could revolutionize computing, sensing and a host of other technologies.

Keep reading...Show less
Access all of The Cipher Brief’s national security-focused expert insight by becoming a Cipher Brief Subscriber+ Member.
Watch Now

Related Articles

What Happens When Weapons go to War?

Lethal autonomous weapons systems (LAWS) are weapons that need little, if any, human interaction in order to select and engage their targets. While [...] More

Quantum Computing Means Unbreakable Codes at Unbeatable Speeds

The field of quantum physics, a century-old science, which found that particles have unique and unexpected properties at the smallest scale, is now [...] More

Quantum Communication and the Measure of a Paradox

Quantum computing and other technologies, which seek to exploit the bizarre behaviors of particles at the microscopic quantum level, have the [...] More

How Do You Code American Values into Artificial Intelligence?

How Do You Code American Values into Artificial Intelligence?

The explosion of data in a digital world has exposed people to volumes of information as never before. But just as this data will increase [...] More

Smart Materials: From Hypercolor to the Warfighter

Some may remember the Hypercolor t-shirt of the 1990s. Made of a thermochromic material, the shirts represent an early example of a “smart material.” [...] More

Conflict and Common Goals: the Government and Silicon Valley

Conflict and Common Goals: the Government and Silicon Valley

Earlier this month, Director of National Intelligence (DNI) James Clapper described reaching out to the private sector as a “daunting task,” and that [...] More