What is the quantum apocalypse? – The Week UK

Posted: February 3, 2022 at 3:41 pm

Experts have been warning of something called the quantum apocalypse the point when quantum computers become a reality and render most methods of internet encryption useless.

Boris Johnson promised in November that the UK would go big on quantum computing a new and more powerful way of processing information, based on quantum physics. If you imagine a standard computer to be like a horse and cart, then a quantum computer is more like a sports car a huge leap forward, explained the BBC.

The UK is aiming to secure 50% of the global quantum computing market by 2040, said The Guardian, by investing in the National Quantum Computing Centre in Harwell, Oxfordshire. But the US and China have already taken huge steps to revolutionise research in the field, with the Americans achieving a dramatic lead in quantum computing patents, said Scientific American.

A leaked Google research paper published in 2019 suggested that a computer designed by the tech giant had achieved quantum supremacy defined by The Independent as the ability to perform a calculation that was far beyond the reach of todays most powerful supercomputers.

The paper said that Googles 72-qubit computer took just 200 seconds to perform a calculation that would have taken a supercomputer around 10,000 years to complete.

There is hope that the sophistication of quantum computers could enable scientists to design new chemicals, paving the way for advanced medicines and materials. It could also help weather forecasts and stock trades, and even combat global heating.

Quantum computing gives us a way to model nature better, said Jay Gambetta, a vice-president of quantum computing at IBM, which boasts the worlds most powerful quantum processor.

However, there is also what the BBC has described as a dark side to quantum computing. Current computers would take years, decades and even centuries to crack the encryption codes created by todays machines, but the fact that a quantum computer could theoretically do this in just seconds poses an enormous cybersecurity risk.

The notion of all the worlds most encrypted files from WhatsApp messages to online banking to government data suddenly being broken into thanks to the advent of quantum computing is known as the quantum apocalypse.

The quantum apocalypse could also mark the end of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, as it would make the blockchain network which is considered to be pretty much hack-proof insecure. UK cybersecurity firm Post Quantum has said that if measures are not put in place, then bitcoin will expire the very day the first quantum computer appears.

The quantum apocalypse isnt a problem that can be left to the next generation to solve. Tim Callan, chief compliance officer at cybersecurity firm Sectigo, warned The Independent that quantum computers could reach the point of defeating our current encryption systems within the next 10 or 15 years.

When that happens, our modern systems of finance, commerce, communication, transportation, manufacturing, energy, government, and healthcare will for all intents and purposes cease to function, he added.

This prognosis was echoed in a BBC interview with Ilyas Khan, chief executive of the Cambridge and Colorado-based company Quantinuum. Quantum computers will render useless most existing methods of encryption, he said. They are a threat to our way of life.

But its not all doom and gloom. As data scientists make advances in the world of quantum computing, theyre also working to create quantum-resistant algorithms to protect our digital footprints.

In the UK, all top secret government data has already been classified as post-quantum, said the BBC. This means that it uses new forms of encryption that scientists believe will standup to quantum computers.

If we werent doing anything to combat [the quantum apocalypse] then bad things would happen, an unnamed Whitehall official told the broadcaster.

None of this comes cheap. The UK has invested millions into the industry over the last few years and that amount is only going to rise. But if you listen to the experts, the consequences of the quantum apocalypse could be so catastrophic that advancing our current systems of encryption is most definitely money well spent.

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What is the quantum apocalypse? - The Week UK

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