quantum-proof

verb

Definitions

  1. To make quantum-resistant ("unable to be easily deciphered by a quantum computer").

    • All this means that quantum-proofing the internet is shaping up to be an expensive, protracted and probably incomplete job.
    • Finally, enterprises should implement a migration path to begin quantum-proofing their existing technology and retiring technology not built to support post-quantum algorithms.
    • The US National Institute of Standards and Technology is in the process of evaluating new encryption systems that could be rolled out to quantum-proof the internet.
  2. Synonym of quantum-resistant (“unable to be easily deciphered by a quantum computer”).

    • Researchers and government intelligence agencies are scrambling to develop quantum-proof encryption techniques, but figuring out how to export these techniques to the uniquely hostile space environment has proven difficult.
    • Quantum-proof encryption uses algorithms that cannot be cracked by any computer, regardless of how fast it is.
    • In the UK, all government data classified as "top secret" is already "post-quantum" - that is, using new forms of encryption which researchers hope will be quantum-proof.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for quantum-proof. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA