A New Cryptography Uses The Quirks of Photon Streams

John F. McMullen observer at westnet.com
Sun Nov 3 23:00:04 EST 2002


>From the New York Times --
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/04/technology/04QUAN.html

A New Cryptography Uses The Quirks of Photon Streams
By JOHN MARKOFF

The quirky world of quantum physics, where mathematical elements can hold
multiple values and objects can be in several places at once, is heading
toward commercial products.

A start-up company, MagiQ Technologies, plans to announce today a
cryptogaphy  or code  system that uses a technology called quantum key
distribution to thwart eavesdropping on a fiber optic communication
channel. The company, based in New York, says it has a working model of
its system and will have a commercial version available in the second half
of next year.

With the system, keys to the code are transmitted as a stream of photons,
sent over a fiber optic cable. Because of the properties of quantum
physics, the mere act of observing the transmission would alter the
photons, rendering their information useless to any eavesdroppers.

A limit of the system is that it would not work on the Internet, only over
dedicated fiber cables in which the photon transmission can be carefully
controlled. But outside researchers say that quantum cryptography does
make possible electronic conversations that would be immune to
eavesdropping.

"MagiQ seems to be ahead of the research community in terms of making this
affordable and practical," said Dr. Burton S. Kaliski Jr., the chief
scientist of RSA Laboratories, one of the leading developers of
conventional cryptographic systems.

Research in quantum cryptography goes back into the 1980's. But MagiQ
(pronounced as magic) and a Swiss competitor, ID Quantique, are the first
to attempt to develop commercial systems based on the technology. ID
Quantique's system has not yet reached the market.

MagiQ was founded in 1999 by Robert Gelfond, a former securities trading
executive for D. E. Shaw & Company who was also a first-round investor in
Amazon.

The company has raised $6.9 million from investors who include Amazon's
founder, Jeff Bezos; Walter Riley, the chairman of Guaranteed Overnight
Delivery; and Neal Goldman, the president of Goldman Capital Management.

Industry analysts say that military applications would probably be the
primary use for quantum cryptography. "The Defense Department is going to
care, and that's big money for a small start-up to survive on," said Laura
Koetzle, a computer security analyst at Forrester Research.

MagiQ also plans to explore other commercial applications from quantum
physics, including quantum computing. Some scientists predict that
computers based on quantum principle are possible and will be able to
perform specialized tasks far more quickly than computers can.

Copyright The New York Times Company

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   "When you come to the fork in the road, take it" - L.P. Berra
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   "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic"
    -- Arthur C. Clarke
                          John F. McMullen
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