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Is Bitcoin (BTC) Safe from Grover’s Algorithm? – Yahoo Finance

When crypto investors discuss quantum computing, they invariably worry about its potential to undermine encryption. Quantum computers alone do not pose such a mortal threat, however. Its their capacity to exploit Shors algorithm that makes them formidable.

Thats because Shors algorithm can factor large prime numbers, the security behind asymmetric encryption.

Another quantum algorithm can potentially undermine the blockchain as well. Grovers algorithm helps facilitate quantum search capabilities, enabling users to quickly find values among billions of unstructured data points at once.

Unlike Shors algorithm, Grovers algorithm is more of a threat to cryptographic hashing than encryption. When cryptographic hashes are compromised, both blockchain integrity and block mining suffer.

Collision Attacks

One-way hash functions help to make a blockchain cryptographically secure. Classical computers cannot easily reverse-engineer them. They would have to find the correct arbitrary input that maps to a specific hash value.

Using Grovers algorithm, a quantum attacker could hypothetically find two inputs that produce the same hash value. This phenomenon is known as a hash collision.

By solving this search, a blockchain attacker could serendipitously replace a valid block with a falsified one. Thats because, in a Proof-of-Work system, the current blocks hash can verify the authenticity of all past blocks.

This kind of attack remains a distant threat, however. Indeed, achieving a cryptographic collision is far more challenging than breaking asymmetric encryption.

Mining Threats

A somewhat easier attack to pull off using Grovers algorithm involves proof-of-work mining.

Using Grovers search algorithm, a quantum miner can mine at a much faster rate than a traditional miner. This miner could generate as much Proof-of-Work as the rest of the network combined. Consequently, the attacker could effectively take over the blockchain and force consensus on any block they selected.

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A quantum miner might also use Grovers search algorithm to help facilitate the guessing of a nonce. The nonce is the number that blockchain miners are solving for, in order to receive cryptocurrency. Thats because Grovers algorithm provides a quadratic speedup over a classical computer (for now, ASIC-based mining remains considerably faster).

How fast is a quadratic speedup? Roughly stated, if a classical computer can solve a complex problem in the time of T, Grovers algorithm will be able to solve the problem in the square root of T (T).

Thus, any miner who can solve the nonce faster than other miners will be able to mine the blockchain faster as well.

Grovers algorithm could also be used to speed up the generation of nonces. This capability would allow an attacker to quickly reconstruct the chain from a previously modified block (and faster than the true chain), .In the end, a savvy attacker could substitute this reconstructed chain for the true chain.

Grovers algorithm may ultimately help make Proof-of-Work obsolete. Thats because there is no possible PoW system that is not susceptible to Grover speed-up. In the end, quantum actors will always have an advantage over classical ones in PoW-based blockchains. (allowing them) to either mine more effectively or (instigate) an attack (source).

Proof-of-Work Weaknesses

As bitcoin matures, the weaknesses inherent within PoW become ever-more evident. Miners are pitted against each other as if in a never-ending arms race This arms race is incentivized by the ability of larger mining pools to achieve economies of scale, a cost advantage that quickly erodes the capacity of individual miners to survive.

Of course, Proof-of-Stake is not without flaws. For instance, critics assert that it favors larger stakeholders (hence the claim that it enables the rich to get richer). These critics neglect to note that PoW is amenable to the same strategy (albeit with miners).

As this arms race comes to a head, any miner with the resources to do so will use quantum computing to achieve a competitive advantage. Combined with Grovers algorithm, a quantum-based miner would outperform other miners (most likely, small-and medium-sized miners). .

With access to quadratic speedup, any PoW coin will inevitably fall under the control of mega-cap institutions and governments. If so, regular investors and mid to large-cap enterprises risk getting priced out of the market. In particular, their devices will be either too expensive or prone to excessive regulation (much the same way that PGP encryption once was).

Summary

Shors algorithm undoubtedly poses the most immediate threat to bitcoin (namely, the potential to break ECDSA, its digital signature algorithm). Grovers algorithm is a distant second in this respect.

Grovers algorithm may someday pose a formidable challenge to PoW mining, however. And it could conceivably threaten cryptographic hashing as well. Any algorithm powerful enough to reverse engineer hash values would invariably undermine PoW itself.

Quantum Resistant Ledger (QRL) will ultimately offer protection against both.

For instance, a quantum-safe digital signature scheme named XMSS safeguards the coin from Shors algorithm.

Likewise, the QRL team will rely on Proof-of-Stake to head off mining-based attacks using Grovers search algorithm.

As you can see, the QRL team is thoroughly preparing for a post-quantum future. Their mission is an increasingly urgent one, as quantum computing continues to advance by leaps and bounds.

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2021 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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Facing a retirement shortfall? What to know before adding cryptocurrency to your portfolio – CNBC

As older Americans worry about the size of their nest eggs, some may eye riskier assets, such as cryptocurrency, to cover their shortfall with the possibility of higher returns.

"It's a tough predicament, and I think a lot of people will find themselves in that space," said certified financial planner Ivory Johnson, founder of Delancey Wealth Management in Washington.

About 75% of non-retired U.S. adults have some retirement savings, according to the Federal Reserve's 2020 Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households. However, only 36% of non-retired adults said their nest egg is "on track," the report said.

With low interest rates and climbing inflation, some older Americans are feeling pressure to boost returns by increasing portfolio risk, Johnson said.

However, some advisors say assets like cryptocurrency may not match a retiree's risk tolerance and investing timeline.

"I'm never a fan of cranking up the risk on a portfolio to try and make back lost time," said financial planner Zechariah Schaefer, founder of Ascent Personal Finance in Lynchburg, Virginia.

I'm never a fan of cranking up the risk on a portfolio to try and make back lost time.

Zechariah Schaefer

Founder of Ascent Personal Finance

Cryptocurrency has been particularly volatile, performing in exaggerated boom and bust cycles, in relatively small periods of time, compared to the traditional stock market, he added.

Instead, older Americans may explore other ways to bring in more income and boost savings.

A couple of options may be working longer or semi-retirement. If someone is healthy enough to work part-time through their 60s and 70s, the extra income may make a difference, Johnson said.

If a client lacks sufficient retirement savings, advisors aren't likely to suggest cryptocurrency as the solution. However, guidance may change if retirees have a sizable nest egg and more than enough income, said Johnson.

For example, let's say a retired couple easily covers their living expenses with a pension and Social Security income. If they don't need the funds from their individual retirement account, and they plan to give it to their children, there may be more wiggle room, he said.

"We're going to manage it as if it's your children's money," Johnson said.

Here's a look at other stories impacting portfolio planning and retirement saving:

With a longer investing timeline, those retirees may consider small amounts of cryptocurrency, assuming it aligns with their risk tolerance.

"If you have money lying around, and it's not going to detract from the lifestyle you want to live in retirement, I say go for it if they want to," said Schaefer.

Someone eager to invest in cryptocurrency also needs to consider the possibility of security issues.

For example, digital currency exchanges may be susceptible to hackers, or investors may lose their hard wallets, which store private keys to access their funds, said Schaefer.

Those who want to keep currency on an exchange may opt for U.S.-based companies with a longer history, such as Coinbase or Gemini.

However, investors still need to guard their accounts with strong passwords and two-factor authentication, preferably with an app vs. text message, Schaefer said.

"If you use an authenticator app, it adds another layer of protection," he said.

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Okcoin Announces Cryptocurrency (DABA) Licensing in Malta and the Netherlands – PRNewswire

SAN FRANCISCO, July 28, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Okcoin, one of the world's fastest-growing cryptocurrency platforms, today announced it has secured "In Principle" approval from the Malta Financial Services Authority and formal registration from the Netherlands Central Bank. The two cryptocurrency (DABA) licenses will enable Okcoin to further honor their commitment to build a more inclusive future of finance by providing easy access to cryptocurrency for European customers.

"Europe is a big focus for our global growth plans, and we have added almost 25 team members in 2021 to better serve our customers in this region," said Hong Fang, CEO at Okcoin. "We're seeing an increasing trend of European Neobanks looking to provide yield on their deposits, and a PwC report highlighted that 42% of global crypto hedge funds are involved in staking; our APIs and Earn product will provide them with this capability. With these licenses, we will continue growing our presence aggressively in Europe and adding payment rails and banking partnerships to further establish ourselves as a trusted partner for retail and institutional clients."

Upon formal approval from the Malta Financial Services Authority, Okcoin will be the only US-headquartered exchange to receive a Class 4 license, enabling cryptocurrency trading in addition to more commonly available wallet cryptocurrency services. This registration with the Dutch Central Bank will enable greater banking partnerships and payment rail integrations across Europe. Okcoin will be maintaining best practice compliance and ethical standards to create greater connections between the financial and banking system and the proliferating crypto ecosystem.

The licenses enable Okcoin to service customers across Europe as a regulated exchange, opening the door to partnerships with local banks and payments providers to further facilitate easy transactions in these markets, simplify the Euro-to-cryptocurrency transmission, and minimize regulation risks. Okcoin has served Netherlands customers with crypto-to-crypto trading since 2018. In May 2020, Okcoin registered with the Dutch Central Bank (DNB) as a crypto service provider offering crypto-to-fiat trading and exchange services.

With the addition of these licenses and global customers in more than 185 countries, Okcoin now serves more countries than any other US-headquartered cryptocurrency exchange in the world. To learn more about Okcoin, please visit Okcoin.com or follow Okcoin on Twitter and LinkedIn.

About OkcoinEstablished in 2013, Okcoin is one of the world's fastest-growing cryptocurrency platforms. Seeking to build a more inclusive finance future that builds wealth for everyone, Okcoin is building the next generation of tools to help anyone invest in and trade crypto easily and with industry-low fees. Okcoin supports millions of customers across more than 185 countries, assisting them in taking advantage of staking and DeFi offers and trading Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more than 25 other crypto assets. Headquartered in San Francisco, Okcoin has a remote, globally-distributed team and offices in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malta, Japan and Korea.

SOURCE Okcoin

https://www.okcoin.com/us

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Cryptocurrency Prices Today on July 26: Bitcoin, Ethereum surge more than 20% in a week – Moneycontrol.com

Bitcoin's price is currently $30,665.66 and its dominance is currently 47.31 percent, an increase of 1.24 percent over the day.

July 26, 2021 / 08:07 AM IST

Cryptocurrency prices continue to be mostly in green on July 26. The global cryptocurrency market cap is $1.52 trillion, a 9.81 percent increase over the last day while the total crypto market volume over the last 24 hours is $83.97 billion, which makes a 19.32 percent increase.

The volume of all stable coins is now $67.44 billion 80.31 percent of the total crypto market 24-hour volume. Bitcoin's price is currently $30,665.66 and its dominance is currently 47.31 percent, an increase of 1.24 percent over the day.

This comes after Britain's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said onJuly 25 in the latest crack down on crypto trading that Crypto broker CoinBurp has no authorisation for a planned launch of its $BURP token and initial exchange offering on July 26.

CoinBurp said last week it had raised $6 million to build a platform for buying and selling non-fungible tokens (NFTs), digital assets that are attracting interest from some investors but also scrutiny from regulators worried about the risks.

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Are the walls closing in on cryptocurrency ads? – The Drum

As celeb-fronted campaigns bring cryptocurrency into the mainstream, is it time for clearer regulation of ads?

A harsh spotlight was shone on cryptocurrency ads this month. The UKs ad regulator the ASA has said that it now will better police cryptocurrency content while TikTok has issued a warning to creators that it will not tolerate promotion of the divisive digital currency. At the same time, Google and Facebook appear to be opening the gate to more advertising from crypto companies having previously banned all ads. And even ads that do make it to air on the big screen have been quick to face criticism from the general public, wiser to the pitfalls of the crypto boom.

When Spike Lee the famed director behind films like Malcolm X appeared on screens last week extolling the benefits of why old money is out, new money is in in a campaign for crypto ATM operator Coin Cloud, he faced a swathe of criticism for failing to spot the hypocrisies.

Lauding Bitcoin et al as the digital rebellion against a financial system that systematically oppresses people of color and women, he marched through Wall Street denouncing archaic financial systems and encouraging the nation to cash in their dollars for cryptocurrency.

Do your research, Lee says between hyperbole. Is it a warning? If not, it should be.

According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 5.4% of US households do not have a bank account, with the primary reason being a lack of sufficient funds to open one.

Yet these 20 million Americans appear to be the exact target audience that Lee was encouraging to rush to a Coin Cloud ATM to exchange their old money for a new currency thats inclusive and fluid.

Critics were quick to highlight that this group, arguably more than any other, is susceptible to the promise of making a quick buck without proper consideration for the risks involved with investing in something as volatile as cryptocurrency.

According to Glassnode, between May 17 and May 24, Bitcoin holders realized net losses of $2.56bn. Glassnode says most of these sellers were new bitcoiners who had acquired and subsequently sold the currency within the past three to six months.

In a survey of UK consumers conducted by behavioral finance experts Oxford Risk, 36% cryptocurrency investors admit their understanding of the sector was poor or non-existent.

But emotional factors such as the fear of missing out are driving growth, with around 35% of adults saying they have read a lot about huge price rises while 15% say they have been encouraged to buy by friends or family.

Spike Lee isnt the only celebrity to lend his star-power to cryptocurrency ads.

In the past, crypto companies had been used to marketing their products on pockets of the internet Telegram groups, online chatrooms and invitation-only forums. But as Bitcoin hit headlines, large investors like Tesla and Square backed various Coins, and financial giants like BNY Mellon, Visa and Mastercard revised their policies to support crypto projects, the crypto sector began to experiment with mainstream advertising. And their marketing pockets are deep if the calibre of celebs they've signed on to front major ad campaigns is anything to go by.

Actor Neil Patrick Harris has bragged of the benefits of being an early Bitcoin investo for a CoinFlip campaign, Alec Baldwin has mocked those who think trading crypto on Etoro should be anything other that quick and easy, while Tom Brady and Gisele Bndchen have become brand ambassadors for FTX to encourage adoption of the digital currency.

These companies are also spending big on digital advertising, specifically with social media influencers.

Internet sensation Kim Kardashian West promoted Ethereummax a so-called alternative-coin, or alt-coin, to the more established Bitcoin to her 228 million Instagram followers last month.

Over on TikTok, young stars Charli and Dixie DAmelio turned their combined 169 million followers attentions to cryptocurrency exchange Gemini as part of a sponsored campaign. In fact, the use of influencers by crypto companies on TikTok was so widespread they were given the moniker Fintok advisors.

But concern has been mounting within the walls of advertising regulators over the lack of scrutiny given to cryptocurrency ads, especially those targeting a young and financially naive audience.

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) in the UK recently said that it would be taking a more serious look at any crypto advertising. It came following the ban of an OOH campaign from UK-based exchange Luno, which ran a series of ads reading: If youre seeing Bitcoin on the Underground, its time to buy.

The watchdog said it plans to offer guidance for companies in the coming weeks, and is considering whether further action is needed around social media influencers promoting investments in the space without disclosing enough about the risks.

Further afield, the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) said this week that it was looking into the rise of crypto ads after identifying it as an emerging area of concern.

But its slow progress. Arguably too slow for the fast paced nature of this sector, where scams and fraud are all too common.

It is inevitable that digital asset investments and crypto currency ads in particular will face greater scrutiny and tighter regulation. Its really a case of slow regulators catching up with fast-developing technology and greater public awareness, says Rafe Blandford, chief product officer at Digitas UK .

Focus is sharper on this sector because of the associated consumer risk with any investment instrument, especially in what currently feels like a Wild West atmosphere. Because country by country legislation can be slow, we can expect to see ad networks enacting their own policies and self-regulation.

Atomic London is an advertising agency that counts Etoro a trading platform that lists numerous cryptocurrencies among its clients.

The agencys chief executive Jon Goulding said he is in no doubt that a clamp down in crypto advertising is coming. However, he raised concerns over how effective it would be when there remains no official regulation by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), agreeing with Blandford that ultimately well see a network-level stance taken, rather than anything government mandated.

"With most crypto currencies not regulated by the FCA, how are consumers really going to be protected?, says Goulding. It comes down once again to whether digital and social media platforms will self-regulate and block crypto-advertisers from accessing their inventory and not simply whether there is an arbitrary warning, you could lose all of your money as a small print alongside advertising messages.

But rather than a move to stricter regulation of crypto advertising, it appears some digital and social platforms are slowly opening up to it.

Facebook which owns Instagram introduced a harsh crackdown back in 2018 with a blanket ban on crypto companies using its ad product. It has since lifted those restrictions to allow some adverts from pre-approved brands, and has no policy on its site in regards to influencers promoting crypto.

Like Facebook, Google had also previously taken a firm stance on crypto ads in an effort to clamp down on scams. But it appears to be loosening those restrictions for crypto exchanges and wallets, with reports emerging that it has invited potential advertisers to apply for commercial opportunities this month ahead of a change in policy in August.

Given the track record of those platforms I dont hold out much hope that theyll suddenly start clamping down on it, says Goulding. Ironically, when going on to digital publishers sites to look at articles relating to the ASA banning cryptocurrency advertising, the first pop up ad was for a cryptocurrency.

TikTok, however, is getting tougher. Earlier this month it updated its content policy to ban among other things influencers from promoting cryptocurrency.

Aside from the platform, the ability for crypto brands to market to the masses may also come down to the ethical values of the advertising agencies they want to employ.

Many agencies have committed to AdNetZero to help the industry tackle the climate change emergency. Spearheaded by the Advertising Association, its aiming to reduce the carbon impact of developing, producing and running UK advertising to real net zero by end 2030 and asking agencies to commit to make practical changes in the way they run their advertising operations.

The environmental impact of crypto currencies is significant. Between start of 2016 and mid-2018 its estimated that crypto mining was responsible for up to 15 tons of carbon dioxide emissions. The most prominent crypto currencies Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and Monero used more electricity in 2017 than Ireland or Hong Kong, says David Edwards, chief customer officer at AMV BBDO, suggesting that agencies may need to take a stand on bringing cryptocurrency brands on as clients.

Its estimated that for every $1 of Bitcoin value created it was responsible for creating $0.49 in health and climate change otherwise known, I think, as cryptodamages. It seems sensible that there should be tighter advertising regulation until cryptocurrencies are subject to proper global regulations with all the checks and balances in place regarding personal and environmental protections.

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iSchool to Host 1st Syracuse Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Research Workshop – iSchool | Syracuse University – Syracuse University News

To continue its role as an educational leader in blockchain and cryptocurrency, the iSchool will host the First Syracuse Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Research Workshop from August 16-18. The workshop, hosted by Syracuse University professor Lee W. McKnight, will bring together and recognize ongoing diverse research on blockchain and cryptocurrency.

Theres daily media noise around the whole space of blockchain, cryptocurrency, and NFTs, explains McKnight. We want to ignore the noise and ensure theres real research substance to the event. Some may dismiss cryptocurrencies as fraud. And while there are cryptocurrency frauds around, there are also legitimate research questions and student employment opportunities.

The iSchool has positioned itself at the forefront of blockchain and cryptocurrency research and education in recent years by offering the first blockchain management course, which is now standardized as IST 408 for undergraduates, and offered online and in-person for masters students. Through this course, students participate in hands-on blockchain and cryptocurrency research projects of their own creation. Many students and faculty associated with WiTec, the Worldwide innovation Technology entrepreneurship club, and the newly formed Cryptocuse club have engaged in related research, which the workshop will highlight.

One workshop objective is getting an ongoing dialogue going between the academic community, the business community, and government about cryptocurrencies and blockchain innovation and policy, says McKnight. The various round tables will provide a way for dialogue, while research paper presentations and student blockchain project demos will be, for all of us, leading-edge learning opportunities and may help set the direction for further research.

Attendees will have the opportunity to learn from some of the biggest names in blockchain and cryptocurrency, includingCoinmint, which operates the largest digital currency data center in North America -operating sustainably on environmentally-friendly hydro-power provided by NYPA. They can also enjoy sessions on blockchaining cyber-physical communities, the cryptocurrency mining industry, and blockchain law, policy, and regulation research.

Confirmed keynote speakers include Professor Steve Lupien from the University of Wyoming Center of Blockchain Excellence, Professor Ian Taylor from the University of Notre Dame and SIMBA Chain, Dr. Naseem Naqvi, Founder of British Blockchain Association and University Professor Carl Schramm.

Workshop sponsors includeSimba,Coinmint,VMware, and theSyracuse University Renee Crown University Honors Program.

Registration for this event is free. Attendees can attend sessions in-person at 111 Hinds Hall or via Zoom. In-person capacity is limited. Visit theevent websitefor a complete schedule and a list of speakers.

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Mastercard Launches Global Program to Help Cryptocurrency Startups Scale Their Innovations Featured Bitcoin News – Bitcoin News

Payments giant Mastercard has launched a new, global program for cryptocurrency startups. Seven crypto companies have already joined the program. Together with Mastercard, they will work to expand and accelerate innovation around digital asset technology and make it safer and easier for people and institutions to buy, spend and hold cryptocurrencies and digital assets.

As a leading technology player, we believe we can play a key role in digital assets, helping to shape the industry, and provide consumer protections and security. Part of our role is to forge the future of cryptocurrency, and were doing that by bridging mainstream financial principles with digital assets innovations.

What do you think about Mastercards new program for crypto startups? Let us know in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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Cryptocurrency takes off in Yellow Springs, gives back to community – WDTN.com

YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio (WDTN) A new form of cryptocurrency has entered the market in Yellow Springs and has taken off.

Carma Coin is a type of cryptocurrency developed on the premise of charitable donations.

Its not a matter of if, its a matter of when cryptocurrency takes over, says Brad Butcher, founder and CEO of Carma Coin by day, and traveling poker player by night.

Brad and his brother David got the idea to make their own cryptocurrency after investing in others. Using $800,000 they made on those investments, they launched Carma Coin on May 29, 2021.

Easiest way to explain it were kind of like a baseball card. People are buying into Carma Coin for what it can be more than what it is now, says Scott Morin, Carma Coins Chief Operations Officer.

Scott says it took off almost immediately after launching.

Carma Coin launched with a 90-day plan to market in Dayton and then leave Dayton and go to the crypto-community. And it became a nine hour plan, describes Scott.

The team works out of an office inside Coactive in Yellow Springs.

One of the things that really helped us succeed in the beginning was the personal aspect. Everybody knew Brad. Everybody knew David. Everyday believed in Brad and David. And thats what they bought into, says Scott.

That initially drove up volume with more than 12,000 holders to date.

Their mission is one of giving back.

In the two months Carma Coin has been active, theyve given away six cars.

The sense of joy that you feel from these people when theyre picking up their new vehicle its better than anything that you could ever imagine, smiles Brad. Im giving away super cars to try to make dreams come true. Its just who we are and what were about. Its what my father instilled in me and my little brother when we were growing up.

They say to be eligible for the car giveaway, you dont have to own Carma Coin, you only have to register on the website.

Theyve already planned another big car giveaway in September.

Theyve also given roughly $200,000 to organizations and causes the team believes in.

Mental Health America was definitely huge for me. I struggle with anxiety, admits Brad.

The moment with Carma Coin that resonates the most for me is calling my friend Matt the one that got a working dog from Working Dogs for Vets and letting him know were going to donate $25,000 to that organization, and he started crying on the phone because thats the largest donation theyve ever gotten, recalls Scott.

To own Carma Coin, you have to have a wallet like Trust Wallet or MetaMask. Click here for a guide on how to buy Carma Coin.

Theres a 10 percent transaction fee for every buy or sell with Carma Coin. Three percent of that goes toward the car giveaways and charitable donations.

There is no gimmick. This is who we are. Any person that knows me thats what I do I give, says Brad. I find it amazing that what I am doing is so magical that it is literally unbelievable.

I get a lot of those you know when you guys going to rug-pull us? When you guys going to steal all of the liquidity? For one, we cannot steal the liquidity because its locked until May of 2023. So that means we cant access it until then, says Scott.

As their volume goes up and as they get more holders, they say thats how they eventually make money.

To learn more about Carma Coin, click here.

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The Topsy Turvy World of Quantum Computing – IEEE Spectrum

Strange ideas can come from ordinary places. This one came from Texas. In 1981, John A. Wheeler, the father of the black hole and a theoretical physicist at the University of Texas in Austin, threw a party. The guests were all young physicists with a common interest in the foundations of computing, a topic that Wheeler believed--correctly--would become increasingly important in the years to come.

It was at this party that a conversation with Charles Bennett, an IBM physicist, sparked an idea in the mind of Oxford University researcher David Deutsch. It struck him that computer theory was based on Newton's laws, not the more fundamental description of the universe provided by quantum theory.

At the time, the computer industry was beginning to fret over the future of microchips. How many calculations per second would be ultimately possible, how much heat would this produce, and could silicon survive the constant baking? To help them, computer scientists turned to the theory developed in the 1930s by the pioneer of their field, Alan Turing. But at Wheeler's party, said Deutsch, "I could see immediately that using the laws [of quantum mechanics] would give a different answer."

Deutsch began work on a paper that is now generally regarded as a classic in the field. Published in 1985, it describes how a computer might run using the strange rules of quantum mechanics and why such a computer differs fundamentally from ordinary computers.

Fifteen years later, the revolution that Deutsch started has reached global proportions. Quantum computers are no longer seen as weird curiosities but as the powerful future of the computer industry, and the debate is shifting from whether they will ever become a reality to when they will do so. The excitement is not due to their power, although they undoubtedly will be more powerful than today's models. Their big selling point, the killer app if you like, is that they can solve problems and carry out simulations that are basically impossible on conventional computers.

Such is the potential of these devices that the list of companies funding research programs sounds like a roll call of the world's biggest telecommunications and computer businesses. They include IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Lucent Technologies, AT&T, and Microsoft. There is even a New York Citybased start-up called MagiQ Technologies that hopes to make money by developing intellectual property in this field.

One of the strongest forces driving the development of quantum computers is the fear they will crack with ease secret codes that are impervious to other computers. The alarm bells started ringing in 1994, when Peter Shor of AT&T's Bell Laboratories in New Jersey showed that quantum computers were far faster than their ordinary brethren at factoring numbers.

Finding the factors of large numbers is so difficult for conventional computers that code-makers rely on this weakness of theirs to protect sensitive data. With the development of quantum computers, these codes will be obsolete. As soon as the first modest-sized quantum computer is switched on, governments and their militaries will be forced to concede that many of their codes are unsafe. Understandably, they are keen to find out just what quantum computers can do, and various national laboratories have begun substantial programs, in particular the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colo.; Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico; and the United Kingdom equivalent, the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency in Malvern.

Aside from its promise for espionage there is the new physics unveiled almost daily by scientists trying to understand quantum information and how to control it. Quantum computers are becoming tiny laboratories in which scientists can test the theories of quantum mechanics with greater precision than ever before. Arguably the strongest team in the world making such discoveries is at the University of Oxford. Smaller groups exist at places such as MIT, Caltech, and a group of Australian universities, with influential individuals scattered throughout the United States, Europe, and Israel. After a late start, Japan has begun a concerted effort to catch up.

ILLUSTRATION: STEVE STANKIEWICZ

How Spin States Can Make Qubits: The spin of a particle in a dc magnetic field is analogous to a spinning top that is precessing around the axis of the field. In such a field, the particle assumes one of two states, spin up or spin down, which can represent 0 and 1 in digital logic. A particle in one spin state can be pushed toward another by a radio frequency pulse perpendicular to the magnetic field. A pulse of the right frequency and duration will flip the spin completely [top]. A shorter RF pulse will tip the spin into a superposition of the up and down state [bottom], allowing simultaneous calculations on both states.

Quantum information

Digital information appears mundane stuff. The 0s and 1s of binary code can be easily measured, copied, and moved around. But assign a piece of information to a quantum particle, and it takes on the bizarre characteristics of the quantum world. This fundamental unit of quantum information is called a quantum bit, or qubit (pronounced cue bit), and it is quite different from its classical counterpart.

For a start, a qubit can be both a 0 and 1 at the same time. Take the spin of an electron--a property that can be imagined as the spin of a top with its axis pointing either up or down [see figure, above}. The up or down spin can correspond to a 0 or 1. But the electron can also be placed in a ghostly dual existence, known as a superposition of states, in which it is both up and down, a 0 and a 1, at the same time. Carry out a calculation using the electron, and you perform it simultaneously on both the 0 and the 1, two calculations for the price of one.

At first glance, this may not seem impressive, but add more qubits and the numbers become much more persuasive. While 1 qubit can be in a superposition of two states, 0 and 1, two qubits can be in a superposition of four states--00, 01, 10, and 11--representing four numbers at once. The increase is exponential: with m qubits, it is possible to carry out a single calculation on 2m numbers in parallel. With only a few hundred qubits, it is possible to represent simultaneously more numbers than there are atoms in the universe.

Algorithms, entanglement, and error correction

Of course, once the calculation has finished, the answer must be obtained. A simple measurement destroys the superposition, leaving the system in one state or another. Unfortunately, it is rarely possible to determine in advance which state this will be, and that is a problem. The goal is to ensure that the measurement produces the answer of interest, and it can be reached by exploiting the phenomenon of quantum interference. Each of the superposed states has a probability associated with it that has a wavelike behavior--it can interfere with the probabilities of other states destructively or constructively. Getting the desired answer to a calculation means processing the information in such a way that undesired solutions interfere destructively, leaving only the wanted state, or a few more or less wanted states, at the end. The process is known as a quantum algorithm, and its design challenges physicists, mathematicians, and computer scientists. A final measurement then gives the desired answer, or in the case of a few final states, a series of measurements gives their probability distribution from which the desired answer can be calculated.

Quantum algorithms have the potential to be dramatically faster than their conventional counterparts. A good example is an algorithm for searching through lists that was developed by Lov Grover at Lucent Technologies' Bell Laboratories, in Murray Hill, N.J. The problem is to find a person's name in a telephone directory, given his or her phone number. If the directory contains N entries, then on average, you would have to search through N/2 entries before you find it. Grover's quantum algorithm does better. It finds the name after searching through only (check)N entries, on average. So for a directory of 10 000 names, the task would require (check)(10 000) = 100 steps, rather than 5000. The algorithm works by first creating a superposition of all 10 000 entries in which each entry has the same likelihood of appearing in response to a measurement made on the system. Then, to increase the probability of a measurement producing the required entry, the superposition is subjected to a series of quantum operations that recognize the required entry and increase its chances of appearing. (Remember that the recognition is possible because you have the phone number but not the name.)

ILLUSTRATION: STEVE STANKIEWICZ

Entangled Particles: If two particles, both in states of superposition, are entangled, measuring one forces both to assume complementary states.

Coherence/Decoherence: the ability of a quantum system to maintain a superposition of states. Decoherence is the process by which interactions with the environment destroy superposition, forcing a system into one state or another.

Entanglement: the state in which two quantum systems in indeterminate states are linked so that measuring or manipulating one system instantaneously manipulates the second.

Qubit: a unit of information used in quantum computing. It is distinct from an ordinary bit in that it can encode a superposition of values.

Spin: a quantum mechanical property of particles that in certain cases can take only two mutually exclusive values. It is used widely in nuclear magnetic resonance.

Superposition: if a physical system such as a particle can be found in more than one state and its state is unknown, it exists in a superposition of those states. That is, if there are two possible states, the system can be said to exist in both at once until its state is actually measured. Such a measurement collapses the system onto one state or another.

Teleportation: communication between two parties using entangled particles. Through the entanglement the state of one particle can be transferred to another distant particle with which it is entangled.

Vibrational State: the quantized state of the collective motion of ions in a linear ion trap. The vibrational state can encode a qubit and is used to link the ions during calculations.

As if superposed values and probability waves were not counterintuitive enough, another strange phenomenon is prominent in the new science of quantum information. In the '30s, scientists fiercely debated whether what quantum mechanics predicted had a real existence or whether its strangeness was due to some deficiency in the theory. In particular, Albert Einstein could not believe that the universe was built as quantum mechanics claimed. So, together with his colleagues Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, he devised a thought experiment to find holes in the new theory.

The thought experiment centers on the behavior of pairs of particles that, according to quantum theory, are joined together--entangled--in a profound way that has no analog in the classical world. Prod one, and it seems the other instantly feels the influence, no matter how far away it might be [see figure, above]. The three scientists pointed out that this process would have to involve a faster-than-light signal passing between the particles--an impossibility. Their conclusion became known as the EPR (Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen) paradox and the entangled particles as EPR pairs.

The debate was resolved by John Bell, a theorist at CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics near Geneva, and the French physicist Alain Aspect. They proved that the Siamese twins of the quantum world, EPR pairs, indeed behave in the way predicted by quantum mechanics. However, the experiment also showed that there is no faster-than-light signal and that entanglement cannot be used for superluminal communication. Rather than communicating, EPR pairs share the same existence, the same destiny, if you like. Entanglement is now one of the key phenomena exploited in quantum information processing. Today the EPR experiment is performed almost daily around the world.

If creating entanglement and superposition has become a commonplace event compared with 10 years ago, quantum information remains fragile stuff. Ordinary interactions with the environment destroy qubits and the information they contain, a process known as decoherence. (Its opposite, coherence, is the ability of a qubit to maintain such quantum characteristics as superposition.) If quantum information is to pass into the world of computer science, a process of error correction is needed to protect against decoherence [see Defining Terms, left].

Initially, physicists believed that such a technique was impossible, because detecting and correcting errors would mean measuring the state of a quantum system and so destroying the information it contained. Still, by the early '90s Deutsch had shown this need not be the case. And in 1994 Andrew Steane at the University of Oxford and Peter Shor at AT&T's Bell Laboratories in New Jersey independently discovered practical quantum error-correction algorithms.

The problem is similar to reproducing in one place a message that has been constructed in another. If the message is sent over a channel or stored in a place noisy enough to distort some of the bits in the sequence, how can the receiver recognize the message? By adding redundancy to the message so that the sender can correct bits that have been distorted.

Shor and Steane came up with the quantum equivalent of sending the same bit three times. The extra qubits are known as ancillas. Measuring these qubits tells the receiver what errors have occurred and how to correct the qubits that are part of the message.

NMR leads the charge

The first big breakthrough for scientists building actual quantum computers came in the mid-'90s, when they discovered how to carry out calculations using the techniques of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The key idea was that a single molecule can act like a tiny computer. Information is stored in the orientation of nuclear spins in the molecule, each nucleus holding one qubit. And the interaction between the nuclear spins, known as spin-spin coupling, serves to mediate logic operations. In a strong magnetic field, these nuclei precess around the direction of the magnetic field at frequencies that depend on their chemical environment.

For instance, in a 9.3-tesla field, a carbon-13 nucleus in a chloroform molecule precesses at about 100 MHz. By zapping the molecule with radio waves tuned to these resonant frequencies, it is possible to manipulate each nucleus individually to carry out logic operations. The manipulation might involve flipping a nucleus from a 1 to a 0, a so-called one-qubit operation or single-bit rotation; or it might involve two linked nuclei in a two-qubit operation, in which the value of one nucleus is flipped in a way that depends on the value of the other.

Chloroform made with the carbon-13 isotope is a good example of a molecule that can act as a two-qubit quantum computer, because its hydrogen and carbon-13 nuclei can be addressed individually by the radio waves. A quantum calculation is then carried out by encoding a program--a sequence of one- and two-qubit operations--as a series of RF pulses. The results are then read out by listening for the magnetic induction signal generated by the precessing nuclei at the end of the calculation. That signal indicates the orientation of the nuclear spin.

Nuclear magnetic resonance sounds like the dream solution to a thorny problem. Nuclei are naturally isolated from the noise of the outside world and so can maintain coherence for many seconds, enough time to perform hundreds of logic operations. In addition, NMR is a mature technology, having been used over many years for imaging and chemical analysis.

But the technique has some severe limitations. Single molecules do not produce a signal strong enough to be observed. Instead, NMR experiments must involve huge numbers of molecules (of the order of 1023) so that their combined magnetic induction signal is large enough to be picked up. (These molecules are usually distributed in a solvent, so the first quantum computers actually have liquid hearts.)

To begin a calculation, the initial state of the computer must be known. But in a material at room temperature, the spin up and spin down states are distributed almost equally and at random. In other words, the state of each of the many computers in solution cannot be known, rendering any subsequent calculation meaningless.

ILLUSTRATION: STEVE STANKIEWICZ

Quantum Logic: One of the most important logic elements in quantum computing is the controlled-NOT gate, similar to a controllable inverter circuit. In such an element, the state of one qubit, the control qubit, determines whether the final state of a second qubit, the input qubit, will be inverted by a series of RF pulses.

But never say die. In 1997, two groups independently came to quantum computing's rescue. Isaac Chuang, now at IBM's Almaden Laboratory near San Jose, Calif., and Neil Gershenfeld at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in Cambridge, found that they could turn a small natural bias--say, toward spinning up rather than down with respect to the magnetic field--in the nuclei of some molecules to advantage. They could use it to establish a kind of artificial ground state (00 for a two-qubit stystem) from which to start a calculation. At the same time, David Cory, also at MIT, and Amr Fahmy and Timothy Havel, both from Harvard University, in Cambridge, Mass., discovered that by bombarding the sample with radio pulses they could effectively "jam" the signal from all but the ground state.

To carry out useful calculations, the computer must be able to perform any logical operation. For quantum computers, there are two logic operations from which all other operations can be derived, rather like the AND and NOT gates in classical computing. One involves rotating a single qubit. The other, carried out on two qubits and called a controlled-NOT gate, flips or fails to flip one qubit depending on the state of another to which it is coupled [see figure, above]. Both these operations are straightforward: simply bombard the liquid sample with the appropriate sequence of radio pulses. Since 1997, these two groups and others, notably at Los Alamos and Oxford University, have built liquid NMR quantum computers with up to seven qubits to perform simple algorithms, one of which even belongs to the mathematical family of Shor's code-cracking formula [see "Quantum Code Cracking Creeps Closer," Spectrum, October 2000].

Unfortunately, quantum computers based on liquid NMR will never be much more powerful than this. The readout signals they produce plummet exponentially with the number of qubits involved in the calculation, because the proportion of molecules found in the appropriate starting state decreases. So scientists do not expect to be able to handle any more than a dozen qubits or so before the signal becomes indistinguishable from the background. Attempts to build machines that can handle more than 10 qubits continue, but if nontrivial quantum computing is ever to become possible, some other approach is needed.

Refrigerated ions

A technology that is less in the public eye than NMR has attracted others. In 1995 Ignacio Cirac and Peter Zoller of the University of Innsbruck, in Austria, suggested using ion traps to build quantum logic gates. The technology behind ion traps is already used for spectroscopy and to improve time and frequency standards, but huge advances are needed for quantum computation. The idea is that a number of ultra-cold ions can be trapped using a device known as a linear radio-frequency Paul trap. This device sets up a high-frequency RF field that holds the ions tightly in two dimensions but only weakly in the third dimension. Because the ions have the same charge, they repel each other and tend to arrange themselves in a straight line, equally spaced, like beads on an elastic string. The arrangement allows them to vibrate as a group in ways important for quantum computing.

The qubits are initially stored in the internal spin states of the ions relative to a background magnetic field. They are written to the ions using a pulsed, oscillating magnetic field, which flips the bits or places them in a superposition of up and down states, depending on its duration. An advantage of ion traps is that this superposition is extremely robust, lasting for at least as long as the qubits in NMR, ample time to carry out the desired logic operations.

ILLUSTRATION: STEVE STANKIEWICZ

Computing in an Ion Trap: Ions are lined up in a trap by RF energy from four electrodes, then chilled using lasers [top]. The electrostatic repulsion between the ions couples their individual motion as if they were connected by springs [middle]. The coupled motion, or vibrational state, can be used to transfer quantum information from one qubit to another. Basically, a pulse of energy equal to the difference between the quantum state of the ion and the vibrational state of the two ions (0 or 1) leads the ion to swap its internal state for the vibrational state. A similar pulse to the other ion performs another swap, transferring the original state of the first qubit to the second.

To share the qubits between the ions, scientists turn to the ion vibrations. The aim is to chill the ions until as a group they are absolutely still. This is the ground state of the system. Inject a little energy, and the ions begin to vibrate. But being quantum particles, the ions can exist in a superposition of the ground state and the vibratory state, so the vibration can be used to store a qubit. Because the ions all take part in the vibration, this qubit is shared among them. It's as if this collective motion is a kind of databus, allowing all the ions to temporarily share the information and become entangled. This sharing allows the IF and THEN type operations that are the building blocks of computer logic gates. For example, an instruction might be: IF the vibrational state is 1, THEN flip the qubit in the first ion's internal spin state. Researchers at the National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST) have already demonstrated that a string of four ions can be entangled and have said that more should be possible.

At least five groups around the world are working on ion trap quantum computers, but David Wineland's team at NIST is widely regarded as the leader. His group has built a 2-qubit logic gate using a single beryllium ion cooled to its vibrating ground state. Using a laser focused on the ion, the group superimposes on the background magnetic field a second magnetic field with a magnitude that varies with the position of the ions. The ion's vibration causes it to experience an oscillating magnetic field, and when the frequency of the oscillation matches the energy difference between the ion's two spin states, energy is transferred from the spin to the vibrational state, mapping the quantum information to the vibrational from the spin state [see figure, above]. This is the basis of a controlled-NOT gate and was realized in 1995 only a few months after Cirac and Zoller's announcement. Reading the data involves scattering light off the ion, since a spin up ion can be made to scatter strongly, while a spin down ion will scatter hardly at all.

Ion traps, too, have their limitations. One is the short decoherence time of the qubits after transfer to the vibrational "databus." Because the ions are charged, the vibrations are strongly influenced by stray electric fields, causing decoherence. Nonetheless, the group is confident that this tendency can be overcome by isolating the trap better from the environment. Ion traps also suffer from problems of scalability. The more ions there are in the trap, the greater the risk of tapping into uncontrollable vibrational states and so destroying the calculation. The next step will be to build adjacent traps, each holding only a few ions, and sending quantum information from one trap to another, either by physically moving the ions or by a phenomenon peculiar to quantum information called teleportation.

The alternatives

While liquid NMR is doomed because of the problems of working at room temperature, several groups are looking into carrying out NMR-type manipulations on single atoms in the solid state. A proposal from Bruce Kane at the University of Maryland in particular has attracted attention. His idea is to bury an array of phosphorus atoms in silicon and overlay it with an insulating layer, on top of which sits a like array of electrodes, each of which can apply a voltage to the atom beneath it. The ingenious aspect of this setup is how Kane proposes to control the spin of each nucleus.

Just as in NMR, the spin of the nuclei can be flipped by being zapped with radio waves of just the right energy--but, of course, these radio waves would flip every nucleus. Now phosphorus atoms have a single electron in their outer shell that interacts with the nuclear spin in a complex way. Applying a voltage to the atom changes the energy required to address both the nuclear and the electronic spin, and therefore it changes the frequency of the radio waves needed to flip the nucleus. So by applying a voltage to a specific electrode and zapping the array with the new frequency, it is possible to address a single nucleus.

But to perform a controlled-NOT logic operation, two qubits have to become entangled. Kane also has a way of doing this. Voltages applied between adjacent phosphorus atoms in the array can turn on and off the interactions between the outer electrons in each atom, allowing two-qubit operations.

Of course, the theory is all very well. The difficulty is actually building such a device, and Kane's collaborators are already working on it. At the Centre for Quantum Computer Technology at the University of New South Wales, in Australia, Robert Clark heads a team that is hoping to overcome many of the obstacles Kane's device faces. First up is the difficulty of creating the atomic array and preventing the phosphorus atoms from migrating within the silicon.

Kane is setting up a lab to study another challenging aspect of his device: the readout. Once the one- or two-qubit operation has been completed, the result has to be read out from the nuclear spins. Once again, Kane relies on the link between nuclear and electronic spins to get an answer. By very carefully measuring the spin of the electron, he said, it is possible to infer the spin of the nucleus. Measuring the spin of a single electron has never been done, but Kane said this should be possible shortly.

Kane's idea has attracted so much attention because many of these logic gates can be linked together to form a large quantum computer, though doing so may take some time. New South Wales's Clark believes that a handful of qubits might be possible in the medium term.

The quantum phenomena of superconductivity may also prove useful for building quantum computers. In 1999, at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, a team designed a superconducting circuit in which superposed counter-rotating currents could prove useful for storing and manipulating qubits. The circuit consists of a loop with three or four Josephson junctions for measuring the circuit's state. The fact that it is made by conventional electron-beam lithographic techniques makes it particularly conducive to large-scale integration. However, superconducting circuits have short decoherence times, and today's techniques for measuring the states of the circuits are too invasive for useful manipulation of qubits.

A more advanced solid-state technology is the quantum dot, essentially a semiconductor trap holding a discrete number of electrons. These have been studied since the early 1990s because the trapped electrons act like artificial atoms, with their own periodic table and chemistry. Then in 1998, David DiVincenzo of IBM and Daniel Loss of the University of Basel, in Switzerland, proposed using quantum dots as the building block of a quantum computer, and a variety of ideas have since been put forward for exploiting the dots' quantum properties for computation. One idea is a two-qubit system consisting of two electrons shared by four quantum dots in a square. The electrons, seeking to minimize their energy, occupy opposite corners of the square, and since this arrangement has two configurations, they exist as a superposition that is manipulable through electrodes at the corners of the square. A number of other techniques involve reading and writing data to the dots with laser pulses and placing a single nucleus at the center of each dot that can be addressed with NMR techniques, rather as in Kane's proposal.

A quantum Internet

The problems in scaling up many of these ideas have persuaded many scientists that if quantum computing is to become useful any time soon, it will have to involve networking small quantum computers together. But sending quantum information from one place to another is tricky. One option is to physically move the qubits, but then they would be liable to decoherence. In 1993, however, Charles Bennett, from IBM's Thomas J. Watson Laboratory in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., and a few colleagues came up with a different option: teleportation.

Teleportation utilizes the deep link that entanglement sets up between one point in the universe and another. Bennett theorized that entanglement could act as a kind of phone line down which to send quantum information--in other words, create an entangled pair of particles and send one of them to the receiver while keeping the other [see "Quantum Teleportation"]. This process links these two points in a way that allows the exchange of quantum information from one qubit to another.

Bennett and his colleagues had to wait four years to see their predictions verified. In 1997, in a small room at the University of Innsbruck, in Austria, a group of physicists led by Anton Zeilinger performed the first teleportation experiment. Zeilinger's travelers were photons and he was sending them only a meter or so, from one side of the lab to the other. Today, more than three years later, Zeilinger is working on the next step, which is to teleport photons over distances of a kilometer.

Soon after Zeilinger's breakthrough, Cirac and Zoller proposed that teleportation could become the basis of a kind of quantum Internet. And in March of 2000, Seth Lloyd and Selim Shahriar at MIT and Philip Hemmer at the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, in Lincoln, Mass., suggested sending entangled photons over optical fibers to nodes containing cold atoms that would absorb the photons and so store the entanglement. This entanglement could then be used for error correction, teleportation, and various other valuable applications. A number of groups are working on this idea, including Jeff Kimble at the California Institute of Technology and Eli Yablonovitch at the University of California at Los Angeles. They hope to have a three-node network running within 10 years.

Some scientists hope for even greater things from entanglement, believing it will be so useful that it will one day be traded as a currency over the quantum Internet. Considerable progress will be required before anything remotely like that becomes possible. Even so, the pace of innovation in quantum computing has already exceeded most scientists' wildest dreams. Only five years ago, many were confident that quantum computers would not be built for 20 years, yet NMR proved them wrong within a year. Only the bravest forecaster would dare to predict how the field will stand five years from now.

With only a few hundred qubits it is possible to represent simultaneously more numbers than there are atoms in the universe

Spectrum Editor: Samuel K. Moore

JUSTIN MULLINS [p. 42], a contributing editor, is a freelance science writer based in Oxford, England. He is a consulting technology editor for New Scientist.

For an overview of quantum computing techniques and the peculiarities of quantum information, try Introduction to Quantum Computing and Information, edited by Hoi-Kwong Lo, Sandu Popescu, and Tim Spiller, and published in 1998 by World Scientific (Singapore).

Some important papers in quantum computing include: "Bulk Spin-Resonance Quantum Computation," by N. Gershenfeld and I. L. Chuang, Science, Vol. 275, p. 350 (1997); "Quantum Logic Gates in Optical Lattices," by G. Brennen, C. Caves, I. Deutsch, and P. Jessen, Physics Review Letters, Vol. 82, p. 1060 (1999); "A Silicon-Based Nuclear Spin Quantum Computer," by B. E. Kane, Nature, Vol. 393, p. 133 (1998); and Teleportation and the Quantum Internet, by S. Lloyd, M. Shahriar, and P. Hemmer, available from the Los Alamos Archive (http://xxx.lanl.gov).

An informative Web site explaining quantum teleportation is http://info.uibk.ac.at/c/c7/c704/qo/ photon/_teleport/index.html.

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is explained in an on-line book at http://www.cis.rit.edu/htbooks/nmr/. The author is Joseph P. Hornak.

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The Topsy Turvy World of Quantum Computing - IEEE Spectrum

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Ohio State joins national initiative to accelerate innovation in quantum technology – The Ohio State University News

The Ohio State University has joined the Chicago Quantum Exchange, a growing intellectual hub for the research and development of quantum technology.

The exchange, based at the University of Chicagos Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, announced the addition today of Ohio State and the Weizmann Institute of Science as partners, referring to both as world-leading research institutions at the forefront of quantum information science and engineering.

Quantum information technology presents unique opportunities for students and researchers to engage in curiosity-driven and cutting-edge work that solves the problems people face in their everyday lives, said Ohio State President Kristina M. Johnson. As a result of this partnership with CQE, Ohio State faculty and students will have the opportunity to learn alongside brilliant collaborators and make a real-world and far-reaching impact.

Ohio State is the Chicago Quantum Exchanges first regional partner, strengthening the organizations connections throughout the Midwest and the nation. The lead member institution in the multi-institutional quantum education initiative QuSTEAM, the university is dedicated to preparing a quantum-ready workforce that can meet the existing and growing demand across the communications, optics, computing and materials industries.

The exchange is composed of a community of researchers aiming to accelerate discovery and innovation in quantum technology and develop new ways of understanding the laws of quantum mechanics, the theory that governs nature at its smallest scales. Anchored by the University of Chicago, Argonne National Laboratory, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, CQE also includes the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Northwestern University as well as a range of industry partners.

Having partners across the world, and across the Midwest, broadens our perspectives and as we continue to grow our community from the heart of U.S. quantum research in Chicago, said David Awschalom, the Liew Family Professor in Molecular Engineering and Physics at the University of Chicago and director of the Chicago Quantum Exchange. We look forward to collaborating with Ohio State and the Weizmann Institute to advance quantum science and technology and develop a strong, diverse quantum workforce.

In addition to advancing research in multiple quantum and physics areas as well as such disciplines as nanomechanics and physical chemistry, the exchange seeks to attract talent, funding and industry to the Chicago area to become the source for tomorrows leading quantum engineers.

Working with leaders at Ohio State University and the Weizmann Institute has reinforced for us the deep value of global collaboration on quantum science and technology, said Juan de Pablo, vice president for national laboratories, science strategy, innovation and global initiatives at the University of Chicago. Quantum information science is poised to make a profound impact on research, technology and business growth around the globe, and we are excited to continue advancing that work with some of the worlds great research organizations.

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Ohio State joins national initiative to accelerate innovation in quantum technology - The Ohio State University News

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