A September paper, soon hushed up, shows Chinese researchers may have discovered a class of quantum-annealing algorithm capable of attacking cryptography in a novel way
Yup—another banger. Chinese research using D-Wave quantum systems showcases a potential leap in quantum cryptography attacks. Do they beef up research with bullshit.... sure but there's something to this one. By effectively using quantum annealing to break through the limitations of traditional algorithms, these findings could reshape the future of lightweight cryptographic security. Advancements happen, and in this case, the adversary is figuring it out; this breakthrough does not yet signal the end of current encryption standards, but it suggests that quantum computing could become a formidable player in cryptography over time. Future research may reveal if this technique can extend to more complex cryptographic systems like AES: good job piece, and thanks for introducing the CNKI to the public. Have you ever thought of linking bids on https://www.plap.mil.cn/ to MUCDs?
Yup—another banger. Chinese research using D-Wave quantum systems showcases a potential leap in quantum cryptography attacks. Do they beef up research with bullshit.... sure but there's something to this one. By effectively using quantum annealing to break through the limitations of traditional algorithms, these findings could reshape the future of lightweight cryptographic security. Advancements happen, and in this case, the adversary is figuring it out; this breakthrough does not yet signal the end of current encryption standards, but it suggests that quantum computing could become a formidable player in cryptography over time. Future research may reveal if this technique can extend to more complex cryptographic systems like AES: good job piece, and thanks for introducing the CNKI to the public. Have you ever thought of linking bids on https://www.plap.mil.cn/ to MUCDs?
Having trouble translating the shared paper in this piece. Maybe you all will be able to decide if it's better proof than the last article.
Have you seen this one? https://www.thebrighterside.news/post/for-the-first-time-ever-researchers-crack-rsa-and-aes-data-encryption/