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Timnit Gebru and the fight to make artificial intelligence work for Africa – Mail and Guardian

The way Timnit Gebru sees it, the foundations of the future are being built now. In Silicon Valley, home to the worlds biggest tech companies, the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution is already well under way. Software is being written and algorithms are being trained that will determine the shape of our lives for decades or even centuries to come. If the tech billionaires get their way, the world will run on artificial intelligence.

Cars will drive themselves and computers will diagnose and cure diseases. Art, music and movies will be automatically generated. Judges will be replaced by software that supposedly applies the law without bias and industrial production lines will be fully automated and exponentially more efficient.

Decisions on who gets home loans or how much your insurance premiums will be made by an algorithm that assesses your creditworthiness, while a similar algorithm will sift through job applications before any CVs get to a human recruiter (this is already happening in many industries). Even news stories, like this one, will be written by a program that can do it faster and more accurately than human journalists.

But what if those algorithms are racist, exclusionary or have dangerous implications that were not anticipated by the mostly rich, white men who created them? What if, instead of making the world better, they just reinforce the inequalities and injustices of the present? Thats what Gebru is worried about.

Were really seeing it happening. Its scary. Its reinforcing so many things that are harming Africa, says Gebru.

She would know. Gebru was, until late 2020, the co-director of Googles Ethical AI program. Like all the big tech companies, Google is putting enormous resources into developing its artificial intelligence capabilities and figuring out how to apply them in the real world. This encompasses everything from self-driving cars to automatic translation and facial recognition programs.

The ultimate prize is a concept known as Artificial General Intelligence a computer that is capable of understanding the world as well as any human and making decisions accordingly

It sounds like a god, says Gebru.

She was not at Google for long. Gebru joined in 2018, and it was her job to examine how all this new technology could go wrong. But input from the ethics department was rarely welcomed.

It was just screaming about issues and getting retaliated against, she says. The final straw was when she co-authored a paper on the ethical dangers of large language models, used for machine translation and autocomplete, which her bosses told her to retract.

In December 2020, Gebru left the company. She says she was fired; Google says she resigned. Either way, her abrupt departure and the circumstances behind it thrust her into the limelight, making her the most prominent voice in the small but growing movement that is trying to force a reckoning with Big Tech before it is too late to prevent the injustices of the present being replicated in the future.

Gebru is one of the worlds leading researchers helping us understand the limits of artificial intelligence in products like facial-recognition software, which fails to recognise women of colour, especially black women, wrote Time magazine when it nominated Gebru as one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2022.

She offers us hope for justice-oriented technology design, which we need now more than ever.

Artificial intelligence is not yet as intelligent as it sounds. We are not at the stage where a computer can think for itself or match a human brain in cognitive ability. But what computers can do is process incomprehensibly vast amounts of data and then use that data to respond to a query. Take Dall-E 2, the image-generation software that created The Continents cover illustration this week, developed by San Francisco-based OpenAI.

It can take a prompt such as a brain riding a rocket ship heading towards the moon and turn it into an image with uncannily accurate sometimes eerie results. But the software is not thinking for itself. It has been trained on data, in this case, 650 million existing images, each of which have a text caption telling the computer what is going on in the picture. This means it can recognise objects and artistic styles and regurgitate them on command. Without this data, there is no artificial intelligence.

Like coal shovelled into a steamships furnace, data is the raw material that fuels the AI machine. Gebru argues that all too often the fuel is dirty. Perhaps the data is scraped from the internet, which means it is flawed in all the ways the internet itself is flawed Anglo- and Western-centric, prone to extremes of opinion and political polarisation and all too often it reinforces stereotypes and prejudices. Dall-E 2, for instance, thinks that a CEO must be a white man, while nurses and flight attendants are all women.

More ominous still was an algorithm developed for the United States prison system, which predicted that black prisoners were more likely than white people to commit another crime, which led to black people spending longer in jail.

Or perhaps, in one of the great paradoxes of the field, the data is mined through old-fashioned manual labour thousands of people hunched over computer screens, painstakingly sorting and labelling images and videos. Most of this work has been outsourced to the developing world and the people doing the work certainly arent receiving Silicon Valley salaries.

Where do you think this huge workforce is? There are people in refugee camps in Kenya, in Venezuela, in Colombia, that dont have any sort of agency, says Gebru.

These workers are generating the raw material but the final product and the enormous profits that are likely to come with it will be made for and in the West. What does this sound like to you? Gebru asks.

Timnit Gebru grew up in Addis Ababa (Timnit means wish in Tigrinya). She was 15 when Ethiopia went to war with Eritrea, forcing her into exile, first in Ireland and then in the US, where she first experienced casual racism. A temp agency boss told her mother to get a job as a security guard, because who knows whatever degree you got from Africa. A teacher refused to place Gebru in an advanced class because people like you always fail.

But Gebru didnt fail. Her academic record got her into Stanford, one of the worlds most prestigious universities, where she hung out with her friends in the African Students Association and studied electrical engineering. It was here that both her technical ability and her political consciousness grew.

She worked at Apple for a stint, and then returned to the university where she developed a growing fascination with artificial intelligence. So then I started going to these conferences in AI or machine learning, and I noticed that there were almost no black people. These conferences would have 5 000 or 6 000 people from all over the world but one or two black people.

Gebru co-founded Black in AI for black professionals in the industry to come together and figure out ways to increase representation. By that stage, her research had already proved how this racial inequality was being replicated in the digital world. A landmark paper she co-authored with the Ghanaian-American-Canadian computer scientist, Joy Buolamwini, found that facial recognition software is less accurate at identifying women and people of colour a big problem if law enforcement is using this software to identify suspects.

Gebru got her job at Google a couple of years later. It was a chance to fix what was broken from inside one of the biggest tech companies in the world. But, according to Gebru, the company did not want to hear about the environmental costs of processing vast data sets, or the baked in biases that come with them, or the exploitation of workers in the Global South. It was too busy focusing on all the good it was going to do in the distant future to worry about the harm it might cause in the present.

This, she says, is part of a pernicious philosophy known as long-termism, which holds that lives in the future are worth just as much as lives in the present. Its taken a really big hold in Silicon Valley, Gebru says. This philosophy is used by tech companies and engineers to justify decisions in product design and software development that do not prioritise immediate crises such as poverty, racism and climate change or take other parts of the world into consideration.

Abeba Birhane, a senior fellow in Trustworthy AI at the Mozilla Foundation, says: The way things are happening right now is predicated on the exploitation of people on the African continent. That model has to change. Not only is long-termism taking up so much of the AI narrative, it is something that is preoccupied with first-world problems.

Its taking up a lot of air, attention, funding, from the kind of work Timnit is doing, the groundwork that specialist scholars of colour are doing on auditing data sets, auditing algorithms, exposing biases and toxic data sets.

In the wake of Gebrus departure from Google some 2 000 employees signed a petition protesting against her dismissal. Although not acknowledging any culpability, Sundar Pichai the chief executive of Alphabet, Googles parent company said: We need to assess the circumstances that led to Dr Gebrus departure, examining where we could have improved and led a more respectful process. We will begin a review of what happened to identify all the points where we can learn.

In November 2020, a civil war broke out in Ethiopia and once again Gebrus personal and professional worlds collided. As an Ethiopian, she has been vocal in raising the alarm about atrocities being committed, including running a fundraiser for victims of the conflict. As a computer scientist, she has watched in despair as artificial intelligence has enabled and exacerbated these atrocities.

On Facebook, hate speech and incitements to violence related to the Ethiopian conflict have spread with deadly consequences, with the companys algorithms and content moderators entirely unable or unwilling to stop it. For example, an investigation by The Continent last year, based on a trove of leaked Facebook documents, showed how the social media giants integrity team flagged a network of problematic accounts calling for a massacre in a specific village. But no action was taken against the accounts. Shortly afterwards, a massacre took place.

The tide of the war was turned when the Ethiopian government procured combat drones powered by artificial intelligence. The drones targeted the rebel Tigray forces with devastating efficacy and have been implicated in targeting civilians too, including in the small town of Dedebit, where 59 people were killed when a drone attacked a camp for internally displaced people.

Thats why all of us need to be concerned about AI, says Gebru. It is used to consolidate power for the powerful. A lot of people talk about AI for the social good. But to me, when you think of the current way it is developed, it is always used for warfare. Its being used in a lot of different ways by law enforcement, by governments to spy on their citizens,by governments to be at war with their citizens, and by corporations to maximise profit.

Once again, Gebru is doing something about it. Earlier this year, she launched the Distributed Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (Dair). The clue that Dair operates a little differently is in the word distributed.

Instead of setting up in Silicon Valley, Dairs staff and fellows will be distributed all around the world, rooted in the places they are researching.

How do we ring the alarm about the bad things that we see, and how can we develop this research in a way that benefits our community? Raesetje Sefala, Dairs Johannesburg-based research fellow, puts it like this: At the moment, it is people in the Global North making decisions that will affect the Global South.

As she explains it, Dairs mission is to convince Silicon Valley to take its ethical responsibilities more seriously but also to persuade leaders in the Global South to make better decisions and to implement proper regulatory frameworks. For instance, Gmail passively scans all emails in Africa for the purposes of targeted advertising, but the European Union has outlawed this to protect their citizens.

Our governments need to ask better questions, says Sefala. If it is about AI for Johannesburg, they should be talking to the researchers here.

So far, Dairs team is small just seven people in four countries. So, too, is the budget.

What were up against is so huge, the resources, the money that is being spent, the unity with which they just charge ahead. Its daunting sometimes if you think about it too much, so I try not to, says Gebru.

And yet, as Gebrus Time magazine nod underscored, sometimes it is less about the money and more about the strength of the argument. On that score, Gebru and Dair are well ahead of Big Tech and their not quite all-powerful algorithms.

This article first appeared in The Continent, the pan-African weekly newspaper produced in partnership with the Mail & Guardian. Its designed to be read and shared on WhatsApp. Download your free copy here.

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Artificial Intelligence and Sexual Wellness: The Future is Looking (And Feeling) Good – Gizmodo Australia

What does artificial intelligence have to do with sex? No, its not a set up for a dirty joke. Its actually a question we recently asked the man in charge of tech at the worlds largest sexual wellness company.

When you think of technology and innovation while talking about sexual wellness devices (the term we prefer to use for sex toys), its likely you think of the speeds of a vibrator, or an app that controls something you use in the bedroom. But it goes much deeper than that. And the possibilities of where it can go in the future, thanks to tech such as artificial intelligence (AI), are as mind-blowing as an orgasm (at least for tech nerds like us).

The Lovehoney Group is on a mission to promote sexual happiness and empowerment through design, innovation and research and development. And after chatting with The Lovehoney Groups chief engineering and production officer Tobias Zegenhagen, its easy to see just how much tech is actually involved in the sexual wellness industry.

But what if it could go one step further? What if a device just knew what felt good? Enter AI.

Currently, the user or their partner is the one controlling certain buttons, either on the device or a remote control. But, what if the device could be the one controlling the device?

Algorithms, AI sensing your responses, then using that data in order to intelligently drive the toy the way you want it, Zegenhagen described of a future that isnt all that far away. An AI controlling a toy based on your movements, reactions and learning from the previous data its pulled from you.

You are getting information and you use that information intelligently in order to fulfil a user need.

Its pretty straight forward when its broken down like that.

Lovehoney Group has a product in the market already, the We-Vibe Chorus, which allows you to, via an app, share vibrations during sex. Chorus matches its vibration intensity to the strength of your grip, with the idea being that its completely in tune with you. The Chorus has a capacitive sensor in it that senses the act of sexual intercourse. During PIV sex, it senses the touching of the two bodies, and according to these touches, it controlls the toy.

It is a straightforward algorithm, Zegenhagen said.

It actually makes a lot of sense. If you think about each of the sexual partners youve had throughout your life, no ones body is the same.

How you move is individual and changes all the time from person to person, from day to day, Zegenhagen said, adding what you want during sex is also individual.

Controlling the toy in general, and then individualising it to the person. That is where I see AI coming in.

Theres an immense amount of promise. But its important Lovehoney Group (and their peers, of course) use technology for the right purpose. That is, not just using tech like AI for the sake of it, that it offers something of benefit to the sexual experience. And, that data privacy is front and centre.

It is definitely in our core to try to innovate, and we need to research in order to better understand user needs, and to use technology in order to advance and to innovate, Zegenhagen explained. But it isnt that straight forward. Theres an insane amount of people at Lovehoney Group in the R&D (research and development) space.

If you compare it with other technological fields or areas, what is real particular in this case, is that the requirements that you formulate are very blurry and very individual, he said. If you ask somebody, What does sexual fulfillment mean for you?, What is a perfect orgasm?, you could ask a hundred people and you get 500 answers.

Unlike with, say, a phone, when it comes to sexual wellness, its very difficult for a user to state the actual need. But as Zegenhagen explained, it is also very difficult to then verify that the need is actually being fulfilled by the technology. Thats without even taking into consideration any biological and neurological factors.

We have a rough understanding of how touch works and how we perceive stimulation, Zegenhagen said. But do we know all the mechanisms behind it? Absolutely not. What happens when I touch a rough surface with my hand? How do my mechanical receptors perceive that? How is that being transferred to the brain? All this is pretty much unclear.

While a sexual wellness device isnt the same as medication, the closest comparison is probably with developing a new drug. You answer a need, test it, tweak it, test on a broader audience but everyones response to that medication will be different.

The human being is too complex to fully understand, he added.

I think that the easiest technical solution to meet a user need is the best technical solution, not the most complex one.

You dont have to be technically complex to be innovative. You dont have to be technically complex to meet a user need it has to be as simple as possible.

Well, yes, thats true. It would definitely kill the mood if you had to read a 30-page user manual or learn something needed to be charged, paired, updated, etc the moment youre about to use it.

There is a huge playground for technology in our field, Zegenhagen said.

With AI offering all sorts of benefits to our sexual wellness, the future sure is looking (and feeling) good.

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Doug Emhoff speaks to Holocaust survivor and his AI twin in LA – The Jewish News of Northern California

When Second Gentleman Douglas Emhoff sat down for a Zoom conversation with Holocaust survivor Pinchas Gutter on Wednesday, he opened by saying, I feel like I already know you!

Though the two had never met, Emhoff did, to an extent, know Gutter.

Just moments before the video call, Emhoff had engaged with Gutters interactive biography, asking him questions about his experience in concentration camps and even listening to Gutter sing Shir Hamaalot, the song that begins the blessing after meals.

Emhoff was at the University of Southern Californias Shoah Foundation, where he visited to explore the centers Dimensions in Testimony project, a series of artificial intelligence bots that allow people to interact in real time with survivors of the Holocaust and other genocides.

As a USC alum and the first Jewish vice presidential spouse, Emhoff knew the experience would be special overwhelming, even. But he said the exhibit far exceeds what I thought it was going to be.

Its so impressive, the use of the technology, Emhoff told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Its so real. And you really felt you were in the room you really felt you were talking to people. It was so engaging.

The visit was the latest in a series of Jewish events Emhoff has hosted and attended in his official capacity as the Second Gentleman andas a proud Jew.

I never expected my Jewish faith to be that big a deal in this role, he said. As it turned out, I was very wrong. And Im glad I was wrong, because it is a big deal.

Emhoff has baked matzah with Jewish day school students, helpedhost the first online Passover sederat the White House,hung a mezuzah at the vice presidents residence, and took part in festivities for Jewish American Heritage Month.

You see these young kids screaming when I walked into the room like I was some kind of rock star, Emhoff recalled with a laugh. You really see that this representation matters. And knowing that, I take it very seriously. I know this means a lot to a lot of people, as it does to me.

Emhoffs presence also meant a lot to the staff at the Shoah Foundation.

It was amazing, Kori Street, the organizations interim executive director, told JTA. For me, for the staff, for the university, to have someone of his stature, who understands the importance of what were doing here, who has a connection to the archive, it was so meaningful just in terms of how insightful he was and how much he got it. That doesnt always happen.

Street kicked off Emhoffs visit with an introduction to the center and its work. The institution is nearing its goal of reaching 10 million students globally each year, according to Street, and the AI initiative is a flagship product. The initiative, which the Shoah Foundation plans to make available through local Holocaust museums around the world, aims to ensure that the common practice of having survivors speak about their experiences can outlast the survivors themselves.

After showing Emhoff a video testimony of a Holocaust survivor from the same town as Emhoffs family in Eastern Europe, it was time to meet Gutter.

Emhoff spoke first with the AI rendering of Gutter, asking him a series of questions about his survival story, his message to students today, and yes, asking Gutter to sing him a song.

Thank you, Pinchas, Emhoff said to the screen with a smile. Ill see you in the other room.

There, real-life Gutter continued to share his story. He also expressed his gratitude to Emhoff and the Biden administration for their work combating hate and antisemitism.

I really feel that you are able to make a difference, and you are making a difference, Gutter told Emhoff.

Gutter spoke about the importance of sharing his story with younger generations and of connecting his experience with current events. He mentioned Russias war on Ukraine multiple times.

Take this flame, Gutter said he tells students. Light up the world with these flames and make the world a better place.

Emhoff was visibly moved by Gutters story. Both Gutters, in fact.

I love your message of unity, Emhoff told the real-life Gutter over Zoom. We all need to stand together and stand united against this epidemic of hate.

As he thinks about the challenges facing the American Jewish community, Emhoff said the words of the AI Gutter expressed exactly how Im feeling about these issues.

That AI message really rang true, Emhoff said. Hearing his positivity after everything hes been through all these memories that hes had to live with for so many years, 70-plus years and to be so positive, and so upbeat, and be willing to share with the world now through this technology, his story, is just really, its amazing.

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U.S. senators unveil bill to regulate cryptocurrency – Reuters

WASHINGTON, June 7 (Reuters) - A bipartisan pair of U.S. senators unveiled a bill on Tuesday that would establish new rules for cryptocurrency, and hand the bulk of their oversight to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

The bill, introduced by Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis, one of Congress' most vocal cryptocurrency advocates, and Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, marks one of the most ambitious efforts yet by lawmakers to place clear guard rails around rapidly growing and controversial cryptocurrency markets.

The measure would stipulate that the CFTC, not the Securities and Exchange Commission, play the primary role in regulating crypto products, most of which the senators said operate more like commodities than securities. The smaller CFTC is generally seen as a friendlier regulator for cryptocurrency, as the SEC has typically found that crypto products must adhere to a host of securities requirements.

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The bill is not expected to become law in the current session of Congress, with the midterm elections just months away, but its framework could serve as a starting point for future debates about how best to oversee those markets.

"We expect this bill will be the starting point for debate next year regardless of which party controls the House or the Senate," wrote Jaret Seiberg, an analyst with Cowen Washington Research Group. "What does matter is that there is a bipartisan effort to bring crypto into the existing regulatory regime even if the details are likely to change."

The senators said the bill is aimed at providing certainty and clarity to crypto markets, alongside consumer protections.

Among other items, the bill would establish new rules for "stablecoins," which are tokens intended to have their value pegged to a traditional asset like the U.S. dollar. Those products have been under significant pressure lately after a crash in the value of a high-profile stablecoin, TerraUSD. read more

The new bill would require stablecoin issuers to maintain high-quality liquid assets equal to the value of all outstanding stablecoins, and public disclosures of those holdings.

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Reporting by Pete Schroeder in WashingtonEditing by Matthew Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Seems To Be Vitalik Buterin The Very first Cryptocurrency Market Victim – The Coin Republic

Vitalik Buterin, who co-founded Ethereum and recently tweeted about it, is no longer a millionaire, making him one of the first victims of the crypto market fall. The coin has declined by 59 percent from reaching a peak of $4,800 in November 2021. As a result, the billionaires holdings dropped significantly in value, to around $1.5 billion. The millionaire, however, showed his enthusiasm for the blockchain he helped design, in addition to highlighting the contrasts between open-mindedness and passion. TerraUSD and LUNA tokens value plunged in May, taking $40 billion off the market in just two days.

TerraUSD, a so-called stablecoin whose value is said to be fixed to the dollar, was valued about 6 cents on May 20. According to market capitalization, Ether is the second most popular cryptocurrency. Only Bitcoin has lost more than half of its value in the last six months. The price of one Ether coin topped $3,300 on May 3rd, making Vitalik Buterin, co-creator of the Ethereum blockchain network, a billionaire. When Ethers price reached $4,300 on May 12th, it was estimated to be worth $1.4 billion. According to Forbes, Vitalik Buterins current net worth is $850 million, following the recent crypto market slump.

After reaching a high of $59,423 per coin at midnight on May 10th, the cryptocurrencys value began to plummet, plummeting by 36% in the following nine days. As a result, the value of most crypto millionaires assets has decreased. For example, 12 billionaires whose fortunes were built on cryptocurrency lost $62.3 billion to $46.8 billion at 3 p.m. E.T. on May 18, according to Forbes estimates. These crashes have claimed the lives of a number of millionaires.

ALSO READ The Graph Price Analysis: Will GRT ever reach $1.00 Level again or Not?

The greatest major loss belongs to Sam Bankman Fried (in terms of dollars). He launched Alameda Research, a Quantitative Crypto Trading business, at the age of 29. When Bitcoin peaked in May, Bankman-Fried, a former Wall Street trader, owned crypto worth $16.7 billion, but his net worth plummeted to $11.5 billion by mid-May. On Forbes list of billionaires, he was one of the most recent self-made billionaires. In 2019, he grew his fortune by creating FTX, a cryptocurrency derivatives exchange. The majority of his fortune is made up of FTX stock and tokens. However, since May 10th, the value of FTX coins has decreased by 37% due to the crypto crisis.

A portion of the Winklevoss Twins fortune was also lost. Earlier this month, their net worth plummeted by about $900 million. As a result, their net worth is estimated to be at $2.9 billion, after losing up to 24% due to the crypto crisis. The twins bought Bitcoin with a share of the $65 million settlement from the Facebook lawsuit in 2012, and they created the cryptocurrency exchange Gemini in 2014. Gemini currently conducts trades of up to $200 million each day.

Andrew is a blockchain developer who developed his interest in cryptocurrencies while his post-graduation. He is a keen observer of details and shares his passion for writing along with being a developer. His backend knowledge about blockchain helps him give a unique perspective to his writing

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‘Cryptocurrency A Threat To The Safety Of Global Payment Systems,’ Starling CEO Says – Benzinga – Benzinga

The CEO ofGoldman SachsGS backed digital bank Starling has stepped up her criticism of cryptocurrency, calling it a threat to the security of payment infrastructure,reported CNBC.

It is very dangerous, Anne Boden, who established Starling in 2014, cautioned at the Money 20/20 fintech conference in Amsterdam on Tuesday.

A lot of crypto wallets are being connected directly to payment schemes, Boden stated. This is a threat to the safety of our payment schemes around the world.

Starling, based in the United Kingdom, provides fee-free checking accounts and loans via an app.

Major payment processors are adopting cryptocurrencies; for example, PayPal now allows customers to exchange bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

Related:PayPal Gets A Full Virtual Currency License In Crypto Push

Regulators are concerned that the banking system is getting more intertwined with the unpredictable world of cryptocurrency.

Customers are being scammed, the Starling chief said Tuesday. Were spending far more of our time protecting customers from the scammers than we are trying to promote crypto.

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Messaging Apps: Where Cryptocurrency And Conversation Collide – NewsBTC

The global financial landscape is changing. Every day, more and more people start using cryptocurrency. But as the popularity of crypto rises, so does the number of adversaries hunting for unsuspecting victims in hope of stealing the tokens right out of their wallets. In a world where the privacy and security needs of users have evolved, major messaging apps are stuck in the past.

A large portion of the messaging app market is cornered by Meta Platforms (previously Facebook). It owns both WhatsApp, with 2 billion users, and Facebook Messenger, with 1 billion users. WhatsApp drew in much of its base through the promise of security via end-to-end encryption, and Facebook Messenger promises robust privacy through user controls. However, industry experts question either apps ability to deliver on its claims Meta Platforms is known for its involvement in a myriad of user data scandals. Given the companys track record, its irresponsible to claim that either of its messaging apps is safe.

The next-popular messaging app is Telegram, with about half a billion users. While Telegram does offer end-to-end encryption for private chats, this alone is not enough protection. Telegram is popular among cryptocurrency enthusiasts, who commonly congregate in large chat groups to discuss various tokens and investment strategies. Anyone that has participated in one of these groups knows that they are heavily polluted by scammers and bots. With real money on the line, this is incredibly dangerous, especially for those who are new to cryptocurrency.

So far, no major messaging app has broken into the cryptocurrency space. Without catering to the cryptocurrency enthusiasts, these apps are turning their backs on the cryptocurrency community that turned two-cent Bitcoin into one of the best-performing assets of all time. Millions, or even billions, of users worldwide could be waiting to sign-up for a messenger that takes cryptocurrency seriously.

Thats exactly what were doing with TokLok, the worlds first secure messenger to utilize cryptocurrency tokens. With the needs of cryptocurrency investors in mind, we have pioneered advanced security features that make it the most secure messenger in the world.

First a standard TokLok offers encryption but goes far beyond that to ensure private correspondence. What makes TokLok unique is that it is a non-public messenger, meaning that users decide who can communicate with them. This is achieved using private chat rooms that give their hosts total control only they can invite other users. As such, neither scammers nor bots can send unwelcomed messages, and hosts can limit who has access to their conversations.

Furthermore, TokLok guarantees total anonymity. Encrypted message content is automatically deleted, and TokLok does not collect or store any information about users or their correspondence. All together, these features enforce that only intended audiences are able to read messages and be involved in conversations. Whether messages are on the way to their recipients or being read, they are safeguarded.

We are also working on a feature that will enable users to connect directly, without going through cellular or internet networks. This feature will leverage secure Bluetooth technology to create long-distance connectivity meshes while preserving TokLoks current security features.

Though our app is already developed, we have decided to go public via an Initial Coin Offering, or ICO. The sale of our TOL token (ERC20) will be used to fund the development of new features, such as our secure Bluetooth mesh, and to provide continuous security updates. In total, there will be three token sale rounds, each selling the TOL token for a higher price than the last. The first round is off to a good start, selling nearly 10% of its supply in the last few days. By providing what cryptocurrency users actually need, TokLok is set to become not just the most secure, but also the largest, messaging app in the world.

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Four Good Reasons to Be Optimistic About Bitcoin: Is Bitcoin the cryptocurrency of the future? – Benzinga – Benzinga

So far in 2022, the entire crypto market has been impacted by wider economic and political uncertainties, led by Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC), with prices down more than 50% over the past six months and the price heading for the ninth consecutive red weekly candle. And while Terraform Labs successfully airdropped new Luna tokens to previous holders, the market sentiment continues to be bearish, with the Fear and Greed Index remaining in the doldrums.

One way to avoid panic selling when the price of cryptocurrencies drop significantly is to remind yourself of the essentials, to stick to your plan and dont invest more than you can afford to lose. Of course, thats easy to say when youve lost money in Luna and seen your Bitcoin investments go down in value. However, theres also an upside to the current market conditions as users can now buy Bitcoin at the new low price around the $30,000 mark. But no matter what level your holdings in the current market, you should be optimistic about the long term viability of Bitcoin. Here are four key reasons to consider, to help re-frame your mindset and support your belief in Bitcoin going forward.

Mass adoption of crypto assets

According to relevant data, cryptocurrencies have reached a tipping point in 2021. It has evolved from what many consider a niche investment to be a global, established asset class. Venture capitalists are pouring money into the cryptocurrency market. Among them, venture capital invested more than $30 billion in crypto assets and blockchain startups, with more than $10.5 billion in investment in the fourth quarter of 2021 alone. With an estimated $10 globally in the first quarter of 2022, reportedly the largest amount to date, and double the level for the same quarter in 2021. In fact, investment in crypto has continued to grow despite this years decline in Bitcoin price. "This decoupling is demonstrative of investors' disbelief that a prolonged bear market in digital assets is forthcoming, as well as the significant amount of dry powder held by funds seeking to allocate to the sector," said Alex Thorn, head of firmwide research at blockchain-focused bank Galaxy Digital in New York earlier this month.

Many major financial institutions are also exploring cryptocurrencies. Recently, Fidelity, the largest retirement plan provider in the US with over $4.2 trillion in assets under management, said it would allow investors to deposit up to 20% of their retirement savings in the form of Bitcoin into their accounts. While banking giant JPMorgan recently said that despite the crypto crash, its estimate of Bitcoin's fair value is $38,000. The past month's crypto market correction looks more like capitulation relative to last January/February and going forward we see upside for bitcoin and crypto markets more generally," the banks strategists said. In addition, both Visa and Mastercard have launched their own crypto cards. And as the regulatory environment is catching up, ironically thanks in part due to the Terra collapse, there is reason to believe that cryptoassets will enjoy mainstream adoption in the future.

Countries adopting Bitcoin as legal tender

El Salvador was the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, led by President Nayib Bukele, but so far it remains uncertain whether the bold initiative will succeed. As reported in the Wall Street Journal on May 14, there are no indications that Mr. Bukele plans to change course. On Monday, he said on Twitter that El Salvador bought 500 bitcoin at an average price of $30,744. El Salvador just bought the dip! he added. Its not just El Salvador, the Central African Republic also recently approved Bitcoin as its national legal tender. No one could have imagined that this cryptocurrency, which was only invented some 13 years ago, could become the legal tender of a country today. If these experiments succeed other countries may adopt Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies as their legal tender in the future.

Is Bitcoin the cryptocurrency of the future?

One of the appeals of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is that it removes friction in terms of costs and transaction speeds from payments, especially international transfers. Indeed, according to Ark Invest, cumulative Bitcoin transfers have grown by more than 463% in the last year. ARK analyst Yassine Elmandjra wrote in the report Big Ideas 2022 that Bitcoin will settle $13.1 trillion in 2021, a figure that even exceeds Visas payment volume.

Ark Invests research also highlighted several areas where Bitcoin could take market share from traditional activities. These include international remittances, emerging market currencies, institutional investment and acting as a form of digital gold. Some experts predict that if Bitcoin can make significant progress in advancing these use cases, its price could exceed $1 million by 2030.

Source: ARK Invests Yassine Elmandjra tweet, Jan 25, 2022

Bitcoin's innovation continues apace

Although Bitcoin is not run by a centralized organization, it continues to grow along decentralized lines. There is a small core group of developers working on improving the network, fixing bugs and security issues, and improving functionality. For example, last year Bitcoin implemented a major upgrade called Taproot to improve privacy, scalability, and security. Another potentially significant move is the development of the Lightning Network, a layer 2 solution to Bitcoin that reduces costs and increases speed. As reported in Cointelegraph on May 30, Bitcoin Lightning Network capacity attained an all-time high of 3915.776 BTC, as evidenced by data from Bitcoin Visuals, displaying a commitment to the cause of improving BTC transaction speeds and reducing fees over the layer-2 protocol. This follows news from CEO of Strike, Jack Mallers, at the Bitcoin 2022 conference, that the companys plans to collaborate with point-of-sale behemoths Shopify, NCR, and Blackhawk Network to revolutionize the payments industry. As a result, online retailers that support Shopify can now accept payments via the Lightning Network, in turn allowing US merchants to receive payments from customers globally as US dollars. As the integration of the Strike wallet is with major online players in the US economy, this could potentially do a lot for the broader adoption of Bitcoin in the retail industry.

While there are good reasons to remain optimistic about Bitcoin, there are also still many things that investors and traders need to be careful about when investing in Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies. Data in recent months confirms once again that cryptocurrencies are a highly speculative and volatile asset. Cryptocurrencies are still a relatively new sector compared to traditional investments like stocks and funds, and while we dont have certainty exactly how it will develop in the long term the potential is clear to see. I believe Bitcoin is a viable long term investment both as a store of value looking to the future, with the price trending significantly upwards after each halving event. But also, Im excited about the rapid development of the Lightning Network, for both retail players but also for financial inclusion across the globe, said BigONE Chairman Anndy Lian.

This article was submitted by an external contributor and may not represent the views and opinions of Benzinga.

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Lunarpunks, Privacy and the New Encryption Guerillas – Yahoo Finance

Don't miss CoinDesk's Consensus 2022, the must-attend crypto & blockchain festival experience of the year in Austin, TX this June 9-12.

In 1916, a few hundred revolutionaries declared Ireland to be an autonomous nation and occupied strategic locations around Dublin. In the days that followed, the British Army encircled the uprising and suffocated it.

One by one, the leaders of the uprising were lined up and shot. A young fighter named Michael Collins evaded death by chance. He vowed never to enter into direct clashes with the British Empire again, and began a war that would change the shape of resistance forever.

This article is part of Road to Consensus. Rachel-Rose O'Leary will speak at Layer 2's "Big Ideas" stage at Consensus.

Units were split into small groups that operated in secrecy. Fighters lacked weapons, but the people and rugged landscape protected them. The new warfare favored hit-and-run tactics and disrupting enemy intelligence. It was the dawn of modern guerrilla tactics and it won Ireland its independence.

These guerilla tactics are no longer feasible today. Modern surveillance technologies and automated weaponry have turned the world that we inhabit into a desert with no protective cover. Resistance fighters are easy targets.

Since the 1990s, a movement of privacy advocates and coders called cypherpunks have been fighting back the encroachment of surveillance. In some sense, they draw inspiration from the guerilla fighters before them.

Guerilla warfare is fundamentally asymmetric: It is the tactic of a smaller, disadvantaged people against a vastly superior enemy. They fight high-tech with low-tech, complexity with simplicity, fire with water.

See also: We Have Entered the Age of Anonymous Crypto | Opinion

Coders and guerillas alike define the front lines and change them constantly. For cyphers, it's with ever-advancing encryption and for fighters like the Irish, it's the ability to melt back into the community before the enemy can even give chase.

Story continues

As governments build all-encompassing surveillance machines, cypherpunks use simple encryption tools to render them futile. Cypherpunks argue that without privacy, personal liberty is impossible. Cryptography is a defensive tool to live free from coercion and force.

Lunarpunk is descended from cypherpunk but takes its logic a step further. Its a guerrilla movement committed to establishing a digital forest in cypherspace using tools like encryption that its fighters can recede into.

The current internet is a desert rather than a forest due to surveillance. Lunarpunks defend and define new territories dark, fertile zones that have been claimed back using private, anonymous decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) and peer-to-peer (P2P) organizational tooling. Another word for this would be an agora, or non-state system.

In an interesting twist of history, a science-fiction subculture called solarpunk was one of the principal inspirations for Ether Both lunarpunk and solarpunk are utopian. Unlike solarpunk, lunarpunk is armed. It runs on DarkFi.

Currently in the devnet phase, DarkFi (the word is a combination of "dark" and "DeFi") is a layer 1 blockchain that supports these private and anonymous applications. Lunarpunks, so far a small movement of hackers, are already creating tools using DarkFi that allow communities to coordinate in the dark.

The DarkFi community has been working on an initial design for a private and anonymous DAO. Right now, DarkFi coders are testing a P2P Internet Relay Chat (IRC) client and task manager to ensure DAOs on DarkFi do not become dependent on centralized and proprietary software. Although crypto aims for decentralization, so much of the industrys activity happens over for-profit tools like the messaging app Discord and digital notebook Notion.

Until now, blockchain applications have been built on a desert landscape. Killer apps like automated market makers (AMM) compute the price of assets in token pools and require the app to know everything that happens in real time. The dominant engineering paradigm requires total surveillance.

To engineer anonymous applications, we must generate new concepts. It is necessary to evolve what the DarkFi community calls "anonymous engineering" a new kind of engineering based on hidden information.

For example, zero-knowledge cryptography unlocks a new set of techniques you can make encrypted commitments to data and trustlessly prove whether or not something has happened. You can compose hidden data structures that can hold references to one another. You can combine these techniques with other primitives, such as homomorphic encryption and multiparty computation, to design fully anonymous and featureful applications.

Lunarpunks perceive lightness as terror, and are fighting against surveillance capitalism. In DarkFi, darkness is structured as an inversion of contemporary power dynamics and a way to empower communities. Darkness is the legacy of surveillance turned upside down.

The inversion of hierarchies has been central to many crypto-anarchist movements. Think of the parallel, inverted world that crypto-anarchists call the Parallel Polis, or the tactic of counter-economics, a black market economy that exists parallel to, but distinct from, the statist economy.

You can trace this political symbol to the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who wrote about what he called active and reactive forces. Forces are energies that drive human behavior. For him, active forces were positive and are seen when people affirm and assert their power.

Further, active forces lead to differentiation a multiplicity of cults, factions and communities expressing power in different ways. Reactive forces suppress power and deny difference.

In the lunarpunk's language, forests are active and deserts are reactive. Resistance is active; oppression is reactive.

According to Nietzsche, active forces should dominate reactive forces. He called this hierarchy. But he argues that in reality, perhaps contrary to what you might expect, hierarchies are often inverted. Reactive forces, though lethargic and without any original ideas, are often the most powerful. State power persists by repressing resistance. The desert dominates.

See also: Lunarpunk, Black Markets, and Agorism in the 21st Century | Opinion

Lunarpunk does not negate the current order: It inverts the false hierarchy that places reactive forces on high and suppresses active forces. Lunarpunk proclaims the victory of affirmation against negation, the victory of the active against the reactive, and the victory of the forests against the desert.

Like flowers bursting from concrete, a new design space is emerging from dead-end surveillance optimization. It is effortless and spontaneous, like a miracle of healing breaking out across a scarred and broken landscape.

Encryption is asymmetric: It favors the smaller player over the monopoly. Cypherpunk hero Julian Assange said that "the universe smiles on encryption" because it is easier to encrypt information than to decrypt it. Lunarpunks are wielding this mystical quality of the universe in open conflict with surveillance.

Thanks to Armor and Paul-Dylan Ennis.

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Trapped ion quantum computer – Wikipedia

Proposed quantum computer implementation

A trapped ion quantum computer is one proposed approach to a large-scale quantum computer. Ions, or charged atomic particles, can be confined and suspended in free space using electromagnetic fields. Qubits are stored in stable electronic states of each ion, and quantum information can be transferred through the collective quantized motion of the ions in a shared trap (interacting through the Coulomb force). Lasers are applied to induce coupling between the qubit states (for single qubit operations) or coupling between the internal qubit states and the external motional states (for entanglement between qubits).[1]

The fundamental operations of a quantum computer have been demonstrated experimentally with the currently highest accuracy in trapped ion systems. Promising schemes in development to scale the system to arbitrarily large numbers of qubits include transporting ions to spatially distinct locations in an array of ion traps, building large entangled states via photonically connected networks of remotely entangled ion chains, and combinations of these two ideas. This makes the trapped ion quantum computer system one of the most promising architectures for a scalable, universal quantum computer. As of April 2018, the largest number of particles to be controllably entangled is 20 trapped ions.[2][3][4]

The first implementation scheme for a controlled-NOT quantum gate was proposed by Ignacio Cirac and Peter Zoller in 1995,[5] specifically for the trapped ion system. The same year, a key step in the controlled-NOT gate was experimentally realized at NIST Ion Storage Group, and research in quantum computing began to take off worldwide.[citation needed]

In 2021, researchers from the University of Innsbruck presented a quantum computing demonstrator that fits inside two 19-inch server racks, the world's first quality standards-meeting compact trapped ion quantum computer.[7][6]

The electrodynamic ion trap currently used in trapped ion quantum computing research was invented in the 1950s by Wolfgang Paul (who received the Nobel Prize for his work in 1989[8]). Charged particles cannot be trapped in 3D by just electrostatic forces because of Earnshaw's theorem. Instead, an electric field oscillating at radio frequency (RF) is applied, forming a potential with the shape of a saddle spinning at the RF frequency. If the RF field has the right parameters (oscillation frequency and field strength), the charged particle becomes effectively trapped at the saddle point by a restoring force, with the motion described by a set of Mathieu equations.[1]

This saddle point is the point of minimized energy magnitude, | E ( x ) | {displaystyle |E(mathbf {x} )|} , for the ions in the potential field.[9] The Paul trap is often described as a harmonic potential well that traps ions in two dimensions (assume x ^ {displaystyle {hat {x}}} and y ^ {displaystyle {widehat {y}}} without loss of generality) and does not trap ions in the z ^ {displaystyle {widehat {z}}} direction. When multiple ions are at the saddle point and the system is at equilibrium, the ions are only free to move in z ^ {displaystyle {widehat {z}}} . Therefore, the ions will repel each other and create a vertical configuration in z ^ {displaystyle {widehat {z}}} , the simplest case being a linear strand of only a few ions.[10] Coulomb interactions of increasing complexity will create a more intricate ion configuration if many ions are initialized in the same trap.[1] Furthermore, the additional vibrations of the added ions greatly complicate the quantum system, which makes initialization and computation more difficult.[10]

Once trapped, the ions should be cooled such that k B T z {displaystyle k_{rm {B}}Tll hbar omega _{z}} (see Lamb Dicke regime). This can be achieved by a combination of Doppler cooling and resolved sideband cooling. At this very low temperature, vibrational energy in the ion trap is quantized into phonons by the energy eigenstates of the ion strand, which are called the center of mass vibrational modes. A single phonon's energy is given by the relation z {displaystyle hbar omega _{z}} . These quantum states occur when the trapped ions vibrate together and are completely isolated from the external environment. If the ions are not properly isolated, noise can result from ions interacting with external electromagnetic fields, which creates random movement and destroys the quantized energy states.[1]

The full requirements for a functional quantum computer are not entirely known, but there are many generally accepted requirements. David DiVincenzo outlined several of these criterion for quantum computing.[1]

Any two-level quantum system can form a qubit, and there are two predominant ways to form a qubit using the electronic states of an ion:

Hyperfine qubits are extremely long-lived (decay time of the order of thousands to millions of years) and phase/frequency stable (traditionally used for atomic frequency standards).[10] Optical qubits are also relatively long-lived (with a decay time of the order of a second), compared to the logic gate operation time (which is of the order of microseconds). The use of each type of qubit poses its own distinct challenges in the laboratory.

Ionic qubit states can be prepared in a specific qubit state using a process called optical pumping. In this process, a laser couples the ion to some excited states which eventually decay to one state which is not coupled to the laser. Once the ion reaches that state, it has no excited levels to couple to in the presence of that laser and, therefore, remains in that state. If the ion decays to one of the other states, the laser will continue to excite the ion until it decays to the state that does not interact with the laser. This initialization process is standard in many physics experiments and can be performed with extremely high fidelity (>99.9%).[11]

The system's initial state for quantum computation can therefore be described by the ions in their hyperfine and motional ground states, resulting in an initial center of mass phonon state of | 0 {displaystyle |0rangle } (zero phonons).[1]

Measuring the state of the qubit stored in an ion is quite simple. Typically, a laser is applied to the ion that couples only one of the qubit states. When the ion collapses into this state during the measurement process, the laser will excite it, resulting in a photon being released when the ion decays from the excited state. After decay, the ion is continually excited by the laser and repeatedly emits photons. These photons can be collected by a photomultiplier tube (PMT) or a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera. If the ion collapses into the other qubit state, then it does not interact with the laser and no photon is emitted. By counting the number of collected photons, the state of the ion may be determined with a very high accuracy (>99.9%).[citation needed]

One of the requirements of universal quantum computing is to coherently change the state of a single qubit. For example, this can transform a qubit starting out in 0 into any arbitrary superposition of 0 and 1 defined by the user. In a trapped ion system, this is often done using magnetic dipole transitions or stimulated Raman transitions for hyperfine qubits and electric quadrupole transitions for optical qubits. The term "rotation" alludes to the Bloch sphere representation of a qubit pure state. Gate fidelity can be greater than 99%.

The rotation operators R x ( ) {displaystyle R_{x}(theta )} and R y ( ) {displaystyle R_{y}(theta )} can be applied to individual ions by manipulating the frequency of an external electromagnetic field from and exposing the ions to the field for specific amounts of time. These controls create a Hamiltonian of the form H I i = / 2 ( S + exp ( i ) + S exp ( i ) ) {displaystyle H_{I}^{i}=hbar Omega /2(S_{+}exp(iphi )+S_{-}exp(-iphi ))} . Here, S + {displaystyle S_{+}} and S {displaystyle S_{-}} are the raising and lowering operators of spin (see Ladder operator). These rotations are the universal building blocks for single-qubit gates in quantum computing.[1]

To obtain the Hamiltonian for the ion-laser interaction, apply the JaynesCummings model. Once the Hamiltonian is found, the formula for the unitary operation performed on the qubit can be derived using the principles of quantum time evolution. Although this model utilizes the rotating wave approximation, it proves to be effective for the purposes of trapped-ion quantum computing.[1]

Besides the controlled-NOT gate proposed by Cirac and Zoller in 1995, many equivalent, but more robust, schemes have been proposed and implemented experimentally since. Recent theoretical work by JJ. Garcia-Ripoll, Cirac, and Zoller have shown that there are no fundamental limitations to the speed of entangling gates, but gates in this impulsive regime (faster than 1 microsecond) have not yet been demonstrated experimentally. The fidelity of these implementations has been greater than 99%.[12]

Quantum computers must be capable of initializing, storing, and manipulating many qubits at once in order to solve difficult computational problems. However, as previously discussed, a finite number of qubits can be stored in each trap while still maintaining their computational abilities. It is therefore necessary to design interconnected ion traps that are capable of transferring information from one trap to another. Ions can be separated from the same interaction region to individual storage regions and brought back together without losing the quantum information stored in their internal states. Ions can also be made to turn corners at a "T" junction, allowing a two dimensional trap array design. Semiconductor fabrication techniques have also been employed to manufacture the new generation of traps, making the 'ion trap on a chip' a reality. An example is the quantum charge-coupled device (QCCD) designed by D. Kielpinski, C. Monroe, and D.J. Wineland.[13] QCCDs resemble mazes of electrodes with designated areas for storing and manipulating qubits.

The variable electric potential created by the electrodes can both trap ions in specific regions and move them through the transport channels, which negates the necessity of containing all ions in a single trap. Ions in the QCCD's memory region are isolated from any operations and therefore the information contained in their states is kept for later use. Gates, including those that entangle two ion states, are applied to qubits in the interaction region by the method already described in this article.[13]

When an ion is being transported between regions in an interconnected trap and is subjected to a nonuniform magnetic field, decoherence can occur in the form of the equation below (see Zeeman effect).[13] This is effectively changes the relative phase of the quantum state. The up and down arrows correspond to a general superposition qubit state, in this case the ground and excited states of the ion.

| + | exp ( i ) | + | {displaystyle left|uparrow rightrangle +left|downarrow rightrangle longrightarrow exp(ialpha )left|uparrow rightrangle +left|downarrow rightrangle }

Additional relative phases could arise from physical movements of the trap or the presence of unintended electric fields. If the user could determine the parameter , accounting for this decoherence would be relatively simple, as known quantum information processes exist for correcting a relative phase.[1] However, since from the interaction with the magnetic field is path-dependent, the problem is highly complex. Considering the multiple ways that decoherence of a relative phase can be introduced in an ion trap, reimagining the ion state in a new basis that minimizes decoherence could be a way to eliminate the issue.

One way to combat decoherence is to represent the quantum state in a new basis called the decoherence-free subspaces, or DFS., with basis states | {displaystyle left|uparrow downarrow rightrangle } and | {displaystyle left|downarrow uparrow rightrangle } . The DFS is actually the subspace of two ion states, such that if both ions acquire the same relative phase, the total quantum state in the DFS will be unaffected.[13]

Trapped ion quantum computers theoretically meet all of DiVincenzo's criteria for quantum computing, but implementation of the system can be quite difficult. The main challenges facing trapped ion quantum computing are the initialization of the ion's motional states, and the relatively brief lifetimes of the phonon states.[1] Decoherence also proves to be challenging to eliminate, and is caused when the qubits interact with the external environment undesirably.[5]

The controlled NOT gate is a crucial component for quantum computing, as any quantum gate can be created by a combination of CNOT gates and single-qubit rotations.[10] It is therefore important that a trapped-ion quantum computer can perform this operation by meeting the following three requirements.

First, the trapped ion quantum computer must be able to perform arbitrary rotations on qubits, which are already discussed in the "arbitrary single-qubit rotation" section.

The next component of a CNOT gate is the controlled phase-flip gate, or the controlled-X gate (see quantum logic gate). In a trapped ion quantum computer, the state of the center of mass phonon functions as the control qubit, and the internal atomic spin state of the ion is the working qubit. The phase of the working qubit will therefore be flipped if the phonon qubit is in the state | 1 {displaystyle |1rangle } .

Lastly, a SWAP gate must be implemented, acting on both the ion state and the phonon state.[1]

Two alternate schemes to represent the CNOT gates are presented in Michael Nielsen and Isaac Chuang's Quantum Computation and Quantum Information and Cirac and Zoller's Quantum Computation with Cold Trapped Ions.[1][5]

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