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Quantum cryptography offers spy-proof code

Quantum cryptography offers spy-proof code By:  Nestor E Arellano On: 15 Feb 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

Stolen banking and credit card information, compromised medical and financial records, tapping into cell phone conversations… A team of researchers from the University of Calgary are hoping to put an end to these daily threats by using the theory of quantum physics to develop a spy-proof code.



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Stolen banking and credit card information, compromised medical and financial records, tapping into cell phone conversations…

A team of researchers from the University of Calgary are hoping to put an end to these daily threats by using the theory of quantum physics to develop a spy-proof code.

Their initiative is based on the fact that information delivered via quantum cryptography presents a formidable challenge to hackers.

Should an unauthorized person try to intercept a quantum coded message, the data – much like a booby-trapped suitcase in a James Bond movie – blows up…figuratively, of course.

Any attempt to intercept the data alters its configuration and scrambles the message, says Wolfgang Tittel, physicist and principal researcher at the university's Centre for Information Security and Cryptography.

"Communication security is so important that we want it to be infinitely secure," says Tittel, an internationally renowned physicist recruited from the University of Geneva to head the research.

He says, currently, coded data relies on mathematical algorithms. Corporate and defense IT systems also use sophisticated encryption technology such as devices that generate long, randomly selected numbers to gain access to a network.

These systems are relatively safe unless the device that generates the key is lost or stolen or a global registry of keys becomes compromised.

Quantum cryptography encodes data into individual light photon particles. The data is highly secure because light cannot be intercepted and read without altering its state.

Only authorized participants in the transmission have appropriate keys to unlock the code.

This effectively foils the so-called man-in-the-middle ploy, in which a thief takes on the digital identity of both sender and receiver to intercept data being transmitted between the two. Any attempt to break the code will leave telltale signs of eavesdropping.

The technology also allows a higher degree of randomness over traditional systems since key exchanges can be done several times a second without slowing down data transmission.

The work being done at the U of C is sponsored by Alberta's Informatics Circle of Research Excellence (iCORE) and defense company General Dynamics Canada. The system Tittel is working, however, involves transmitting only the code key via light photons and sending the rest of the message using standard encryption methods.

In this scenario, a sender will first transmit the code key to a receiver. Since light photons are altered when intercepted, the sender will be aware of an attempted breach.

Tittel said senders can then choose to send the message after the lines are secured.


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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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