Posted on 01/02/2014 1:42:59 PM PST by Biggirl
In room-size metal boxes, secure against electromagnetic leaks, the National Security Agency is racing to build a computer that could break nearly every kind of encryption used to protect banking, medical, business and government records around the world.
According to documents provided by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the effort to build a cryptologically useful quantum computer a machine exponentially faster than classical computers is part of a $79.7 million research program titled, Penetrating Hard Targets. Much of the work is hosted under classified contracts at a laboratory in College Park.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
What this needs is the agreement of several hundred very high volume data users to create massive random data flows to overflow even a massively parallel system.
That is, in effect, the NSA is hoping to develop a very fast brute force system. But if it tries to decrypt garbage, it must go all the way to the nth calculation to show that it is garbage, and even then it is never sure that it is garbage.
Eventually, maximum effort to produce minimal results will render it cost ineffective.
They are experiencing a similar problem right now by trying to monitor all communications all the time everywhere. So much garbage that anything of value in it is lost.
When do we get to see the guy from the old Apple commercial on the large screen?
I’ll bring the sledgehammer....
seeks to build = already built 5 years ago and the $$$$$$$$ is a laundering scheme.
The problem is getting genuinely random numbers for the key. Computers produce only pseudorandom numbers, and even if the keys are genuinely random, keeping the "code book" secure is difficult.
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