Quantum Cryptography, which is a type of encryption that many thought would be uncrackable, has been hacked by a group of people at MIT. The good news is that the people who performed this hack said it was not good enough to work on a commercial network. The bad news is the fact that they were even able to hack into a quantum-encrypted network, which means that it may only be a matter of time until quantum cryptography can be publicly hacked.
A team of researchers has, for the first time, hacked into a network protected by quantum encryption.
Quantum cryptography uses the laws of quantum mechanics to encode data securely. Most researchers consider such quantum networks to be nearly 100% uncrackable. But a group from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge was able to ‘listen in’ using a sort of quantum-mechanical wiretap. The trick allowed them to tease out about half of the data, in a way that couldn’t be detected by those transmitting or receiving the message.
The group admits that their hack isn’t yet capable of eavesdropping on a real network. “It is not something that currently could attack a commercial system,” says Jeffrey Shapiro, a physicist at MIT and one of the authors on the study.
But they expect that one day it will be able to do so, if quantum encryption isn’t adequately adapted to stop such hackers from succeeding.[more]
Tags: Hackers, Encryption

No Responses to “Quantum Cryptography Hacked”
Please Wait
Leave a Reply
You must log in to post a comment.