Cabal
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- Jul 22, 2007
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Is there any practical use to quantum cryptography? I heard that, once the next prime number is discovered, we'll have uncrackable public keys, or something like that.
I don't think there's anything that allows one particular prime number to be crackable and the next not to be. There's infinitely many, although I suppose they will be harder to find at higher powers of 10 (or whatever base you're working in.)
Classical cryptography is not technically uncrackable, it's just so time-consuming for a classical computer to do it may as well be. Quantum computing, on the other hand, will be able to crack it much faster, so I'd say the industry standard will need to shift to quantum cryptography eventually if quantum computers become standard.
The advantage about quantum cryptography is that for generating key exchange, the quantum mechanical nature of the transmissions mean that it's hard to intercept. If the data is encoded via superpositions or entanglement, you can't look at the data, copy it, and re-transmit it, because you can't recreate quantum states in an exact, deterministic way. If you attempt to bluff anyway and send up randomly encoded data packets, the people communicating will notice errors in their data when they meet to finalise the key exchange.
My knowledge of cryptography is limited to a book on it that I've read, and Darren Brown's Digital Fortress, so I'm probably wrong on all counts![]()
Hey, at least this isn't a particle physics discussion. I've had people ask me suspiciously about antimatter bombs before

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