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John Kiff

IST demonstrates quantum-resistant offline CBDC payment transaction - 0 views

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    IDEMIA Secure Transactions (IST) demonstrated the first ever offline central bank digital currency (CBDC) payments incorporating enhanced security against quantum threats. Offline CBDC allows digital currency transactions without internet, ensuring cash-like secure and seamless payments in areas with limited connectivity. This offline CBDC payment transaction uses quantum-resistant public key cryptography endorsed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The offline transactions demonstrated as part of this quantum-safe solution are performed using two smartphones thanks to NFC. Money is stored inside a secure element fortified with quantum-safe cryptography to guarantee security and prevent the risks of double spending or unauthorized money creation.
John Kiff

Is Quantum Computing a Threat to Bitcoin? - 0 views

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    The functional reality of a quantum computer cracking encrypted systems may only be five years away. The main threat is not whether quantum computers can 'open up' private key information... it's more about the power of a quantum computer to replicate a private key without you knowing, undercutting trust in the entire signature process. Imperial College researchers have suggested a soft fork of the Bitcoin blockchain that would allow the "secure transition of funds to quantum-resistant wallets." Others have proposed increasing the size of Bitcoin keys. 
John Kiff

JPMorgan unveils research on quantum resistant blockchain network - 0 views

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    JPMorgan Chase has unveiled research on a Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) blockchain network that is resistant to quantum computing attacks. QKD utilizes quantum mechanics and cryptography to enable two parties to exchange secure data and detect and defend against third parties that are using quantum computers to attempt to eavesdrop on the exchange.
John Kiff

BIS Innovation Hub announces expanded cyber security experiments - 0 views

  • Quantum computers may be capable of breaking the cryptography used by central banks and the private financial sector to secure payment and settlement systems. This threatens the confidentiality and could undermine the integrity of payments systems. Given the long-term sensitivity of financial data, this vulnerability must be addressed well in advance of the advent of quantum computing.
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    The BIS Innovation is launching a project to examine how the introduction of quantum-resistant cryptography will affect payment system performance, and investigate and test potential cryptographic solutions that can withstand the vastly improved processing power of quantum computers. Given the long-term sensitivity of financial data, this vulnerability must be addressed well in advance of the advent of quantum computing.
John Kiff

Cargo Cult Quantum Factoring - 0 views

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    "All told, this is one of the most actively misleading quantum computing papers I've seen in 25 years, and I've seen … many. Having said that, this actually isn't the first time I've encountered the strange idea that the exponential quantum speedup for factoring integers, which we know about from Shor's algorithm, should somehow "rub off" onto quantum optimization heuristics that embody none of the actual insights of Shor's algorithm, as if by sympathetic magic. Since this idea needs a name, I'd hereby like to propose Cargo Cult Quantum Factoring."
John Kiff

Quantum Computing and the Financial System: Spooky Action at a Distance? - 0 views

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    This IMF paper discusses the benefits and risks of quantum computing. On the risk side, they would crack many of the current encryption algorithms and threaten financial stability by compromising the security of mobile banking, e-commerce, fintech, digital currencies, and Internet information exchange. While the work on quantum-safe encryption is still in progress, the paper recommends that financial institutions take steps now to prepare for the cryptographic transition, by assessing future and retroactive risks from quantum computers, taking an inventory of their cryptographic algorithms (especially public keys), and building cryptographic agility to improve the overall cybersecurity resilience.
John Kiff

The quest for quantum-proof encryption just made a leap forward - 0 views

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    While quantum machines are still a long way from being able to break modern encryption, US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) launched a competition in 2016 to develop new standards for cryptography that will be more quantum-proof. The winners are set to be announced in 2022, but last week the organization announced that it had narrowed the initial field of 69 contenders down to just 15. And so far a single approach to "post-quantum cryptography" accounts for the majority of the finalists: lattice-based cryptography. Lattice-based cryptography instead uses enormous grids with billions of individual points across thousands of dimensions. Breaking the code means getting from one specific point to another-which is essentially impossible unless you know the route. NIST thinks is that lattice problems are really hard, but they seem quite efficient in terms of time to generate keys, time to construct signatures, and also efficient in terms of memory.
John Kiff

Project Leap: Quantum-proofing the financial system - 0 views

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    the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) together with the Banque de France and Deutsche Bundesbank, launched Project Leap to build quantum-resistant IT environments for the financial system. It will test the implementation of post-quantum cryptographic protocols in central bank processes, and help to advance the central banking community's knowledge of post-quantum cryptography. A concluding report and the accompanying technical architecture will be published.
John Kiff

Science friction: some tire of waiting for quantum's leap - 0 views

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    Embryonic quantum computers are being rented by banks keen to test the revolutionary new technology. In theory, the machines are perfect for complex, multivariate analysis. In practice, today's devices lack the scale to handle real-life datasets. ABN Amro, Barclays, BBVA, NatWest, Nomura and JP Morgan are among the many banks experimenting with quantum tech. Applications explored so far include credit valuation adjustment, economic capital, regulatory stress-testing and value-at-risk. In one test, NatWest showed it would be 300 times quicker to use a quantum computer to calculate the optimal make-up of its liquidity buffers. But with off-the-shelf tech still distant, some banks are questioning their involvement. "Two years ago, I was a lot more bullish," says the chief digital officer for Nomura's wholesale businesses.
John Kiff

Crunchfish makes Digital Cash quantum safe - Crunchfish - 0 views

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    "Crunchfish has applied for a Swedish patent protecting Digital Cash by combining two different data integrity schemes. First, payments are negotiated offline by short-range data communication between payer and payee communication devices using a quantum-secure cryptographic key as a shared secret. Successfully negotiated offline payments are stored locally and securely in the devices. Subsequently, payment settlement by broadband data communication is secured by signing the settlement request with another quantum secure cryptographic key."
John Kiff

Improving the Efficiency of Payments Systems Using Quantum Computing - 0 views

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    "High-value payment systems (HVPS) are typically liquidity-intensive as the payment requests are indivisible and settled on a gross basis. Finding the right order in which payments should be processed to maximize the liquidity efficiency of these systems is an NP-hard combinatorial optimization problem, which quantum algorithms may be able to tackle at meaningful scales. We developed an algorithm and ran it on a hybrid quantum annealing solver to find an ordering of payments that reduced the amount of system liquidity necessary without substantially increasing payment delays. Despite the limitations in size and speed of today's quantum computers, our algorithm provided quantifiable efficiency improvements when applied to the Canadian HVPS using a 30-day sample of transaction data. By reordering each batch of 70 payments as they entered the queue, we achieved an average of C$240 million in daily liquidity savings, with a settlement delay of approximately 90 seconds. For a few days in the sample, the liquidity savings exceeded C$1 billion. This algorithm could be incorporated as a centralized preprocessor into existing HVPS without entailing a fundamental change to their risk management models."
John Kiff

Are quantum computers good at picking stocks? This project tried to find out - 0 views

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    KPMG, together with a team of researchers from the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) and a yet-to-be-named European bank, has been piloting the use of quantum computing to determine which stocks to buy and sell for maximum return ("portfolio optimization"). The researchers ran the model on D-Wave's 2,000-qubit quantum annealing processor, finding that it performed better and faster than other methods, while being capable of resolving larger problems - although the study also found that D-Wave's technology comes with some programming and scalability issues.
John Kiff

Will Blockchain survive Google's quantum supremacy threat? - 0 views

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    The biggest threat to blockchain technology from quantum computing is its ability to break the traditional encryption. However, the sword of Quantum computing is not hanging on Blockchain only but on every platform that is protected with encryption. This would potentially include almost all of the Internet and Digital world we know today.
John Kiff

NIST's Post-Quantum Cryptography Standards - 0 views

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    "Current quantum computers are still toy prototypes, and the engineering advances required to build a functionally useful quantum computer are somewhere between a few years away and impossible. Even so, we already know that that such a computer could potentially factor large numbers and compute discrete logs, and break the RSA and Diffie-Hellman public-key algorithms in all of the useful key sizes."
John Kiff

Privacy-Preserving Post-Quantum Credentials for Digital Payments - 0 views

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    The Bank of Canada published a paper that proposes a pseudonymous credential scheme for use in payment systems to protect users from fraud and abuse while retaining privacy in individual transactions. The scheme is privacy-preserving, efficient for practical applications, and hardened against quantum computing attacks. A practical and interactive credential mechanism was constructed, in which users are issued pseudonymous credentials against their personally identifiable information that can be used to register with financial service providers without revealing personal information. The protocol is shown to be secure and free of information leakage, preserving the user's privacy regardless of the number of registrations. Comparison reveals that the scheme is more efficient than equivalent, state-of-the-art post-quantum schemes.
John Kiff

Project Leap proves the viability of a quantum-safe financial system - 0 views

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    The BIS Innovation Hub published a report on Project Leap, a joint project with the Banque de France and Deutsche Bundesbank that addresses the threat that future quantum computers represent to today's cryptographic algorithms, and thereby to the confidentiality of financial data. The report presents a comprehensive overview of the experiments conducted and the initial technical findings, including the successful set up a quantum-safe communication channel between the project participants that shields financial data.
John Kiff

Google's Quantum Computing Breakthrough Brings Blockchain Resistance Into the Spotlight... - 0 views

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    As science-fictiony as it sounds, quantum computing is a threat that needs to be taken seriously in the world of blockchains. It may not be the kill switch that everyone imagines because of media hype, but it certainly something that should be on the radar for anyone involved in the ecosystem.
John Kiff

Bank of Canada and Multiverse Computing Complete Preliminary Quantum Simulation of Cryp... - 0 views

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    Multiverse Computing has reportedly completed a proof-of-concept project with the Bank of Canada through which the parties used quantum computing to simulate the adoption of cryptocurrency as a method of payment by non-financial firms. Most scenarios in the model showed that non-financial institution adoption of the cryptocurrency would be slow, since there was some upfront knowledge and cost associated with converting fiat to a digital asset. It was also able to simulate how banks might respond, by reducing wire transfer fees to compete with the very low cost of crypto transactions.
John Kiff

NIST Announces First Four Quantum-Resistant Cryptographic Algorithms - 0 views

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    The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has announced the first four quantum-resistant encryption algorithms, after a six-year competitive evaluation process.
John Kiff

'Post-Quantum' Cryptography Scheme Is Cracked on a Laptop - 0 views

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    On July 5, 2022, the U.S. government's National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) selected four protocols that, with some revision, will be deployed as a cryptographic quantum shield, plus four additional candidates still under consideration. However, almost immediately, a pair of researchers broke one of those candidates in an hour on a laptop.
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