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Cryptography and Quantum Secure Communication Are Closer Than You Think

Quantum computers are revolutionizing cryptography and quantum secure communication by challenging traditional encryption methods.

We’re living in a digital world where almost everything, including our personal messages, medical records, banking details, and even national security, relies on encryption to stay safe. Traditional cryptography has held up well for decades, using complex math to lock away sensitive information. But a new player is entering the game: quantum computing.

Quantum computers are more than fast. They operate on entirely different rules, using principles like superposition and entanglement. These machines will eventually be powerful enough to break today’s encryption methods in a matter of minutes. That’s not a future problem. It’s a now problem, because some attackers are already collecting encrypted data to decrypt later.

But there’s an upside. The same quantum mechanics that threaten classical encryption also offer the tools to build unbreakable communication systems. Let’s see how.

Quantum Concepts You Should Know

Before we start talking about the relationship between cryptography and quantum communication, there are some basic concepts you should be familiar with (if you’re not already).

Entanglement

Entanglement is when two particles become linked in such a way that the state of one instantly influences the state of the other, no matter the distance between them. Measuring a property of one particle immediately determines the corresponding property of its entangled partner. Entanglement is crucial for quantum key distribution (QKD) protocols, including device-independent QKD.

Superposition

Superposition means that a quantum system can exist in multiple states simultaneously until it’s measured. Classical physics states that a system is one definite state at a time. But quantum bits (qubits) aren’t limited to just one system. Superposition is like the thought experiment Schrodinger’s cat, which says that a cat in a closed box is simultaneously alive and dead until the box is opened and the cat is observed.

No-Cloning Theorem

The no-cloning theorem states that it’s impossible to create an exact copy of an arbitrary unknown quantum state. Unlike in classical computing, where copying and pasting files is straightforward, the quantum realm fundamentally doesn’t allow for it. Attempts to copy an unknown qubit would violate the linear nature of quantum mechanics. The no-cloning theorem provides eavesdropping protection in QKD.

Measurement Disturbance

Measurement disturbance means that observing or measuring a quantum system inherently alters its state. By measuring a quantum system, you collapse its superposition (where it exists in multiple possibilities simultaneously) into a single, definite state. This collapse is an active process that changes the system’s state. Measurement disturbance helps with key generation in QKD.

Quantum Key Distribution (QKD)

The biggest overlap between cryptography and quantum secure communication is probably quantum key distribution (QKD). It’s a technique for secretly sharing keys between two parties, like traditional cryptography. But QKD also uses principles of quantum mechanics.

QKD relies on entangling two particles, meaning they share characteristics even if they’re separated by a vast distance. Measuring one particle gives you access to the other, allowing the two particles to serve as keys for exchanging coded messages

BB84 Protocol

The most famous QKD protocol is the BB84 Protocol. It was developed in 1984 by Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard (the protocol is named for the two inventors’ last names and year of invention). This protocol uses polarized photos to establish a shared key between two parties.

Real-World Example: Toshiba Europe was able to use QKD to send a quantum message over 250 kilometers of telecommunications networks in Germany.

Quantum Secure Direct Communication (QSDC)

Quantum Secure Direct Communication (QSDC) allows the transmission of confidential messages, but unlike QKD, it doesn’t use an encryption key. Instead, it encodes the message directly into quantum states, such as entangled photon pairs.

Then, the message receiver measures these quantum states to retrieve the message. Any attempt to intercept the message alters the quantum states, which alerts the two parties to eavesdropping.

Real-World Example: Researchers from the Beijing Academy of Quantum Information Sciences, Tsinghua University, and North China University of Technology came up with a one-way, quasi-QSDC protocol with single photons. One-way transmission could make QSDC a more reliable way to send secure information.

Traditional cryptography can’t keep up with the exponential speed quantum chips bring to code-breaking.

Why Traditional Cryptography Isn’t Strong Enough

Cryptography has long been the standard for securing digital information because it can resist conventional computational power. Cracking a cryptographic code relies on solving complex mathematical problems, which can take regular computers up to hundreds of years to factor out (depending on the complexity).

Quantum computers work much faster than regular computers, however, and can solve these gigantic math problems in a much more reasonable amount of time (i.e. a few minutes). They can potentially break common encryption algorithms like RSC and ECC.

We can thank mathematician Peter Shor for this new security threat from quantum computing. He came up with an algorithm in 1994 that factors large integers and computes discrete logarithms efficiently, using a quantum computer.

But Wait…They’re Not Quite Powerful Enough Yet

Quantum computers will be able to crack cryptographic codes in the future…but not yet. For now, they’re still in a developmental stage.

  1. Not Enough Qubits: Quantum computers will need millions of error-corrected qubits to crack encryption like RSA-2048. Currently, most quantum computers have only a few hundred physical qubits.
  2. High Error Rates: Not only do quantum computers need more qubits, but these qubits are also extremely sensitive to outside disturbances, which leads to errors. That’s why the qubits needed for cracking codes need to be error-corrected—but that’s a complex problem to solve.
  3. Scaling Quantum Systems: In order to break encryption, quantum computer systems would have to be large-scale and fault-tolerant, which isn’t an easy task. Maintaining control over such a large system isn’t feasible currently.
  4. Limited Current Achievements: There have been demonstrations of quantum computers factoring small integers (like 22-bit numbers), but that’s much smaller in scale compared to what’s needed to crack RSA-2048 encryption, which relies on 2048-bit numbers.
  5. Development of Quantum-Resistant Cryptography: Organizations like the National Institute of Standards and Technology in the U.S. are anticipating the capabilities quantum computers will have and are already working on post-quantum cryptographic algorithms that could withstand quantum attacks. In the time it takes for quantum computers to have the capabilities, these algorithms could already be pretty well developed.

Theoretically, quantum computers have the ability to crack current encryption methods. But practically, there are too many technical challenges. Quantum computing will keep advancing, but so will quantum-resistant cryptography. We’ll have to wait and watch how this space develops and how it’ll affect the future of information security.

“Harvest Now, Decrypt Later”

Would-be quantum hackers realize that the technology isn’t quite there yet, so they’ve found a workaround. They’re harvesting huge batches of data and storing it, so that they can de-code it when quantum computers have the technical capability to do so.

This strategy has, understandably, sounded alarms among cybersecurity professionals. It’s not enough to just assume the data is safe for now and deal with it later. Cybersecurity works best when it’s proactive, after all. That’s why there’s a big push now for quantum-resistant cryptography.

For example, in January 2025, President Joe Biden signed an executive order that formally ordered U.S. government departments to start post-quantum cryptography transitions.

A new era of security is coming with quantum secure communication, offering future-proof protection beyond traditional cryptography.

A New Era of Security Is Coming

As quantum computers inch closer to breaking the encryption standards that protect everything from our bank accounts to national secrets, quantum mechanics is already offering a solution. Tools like quantum key distribution (QKD) and quantum secure direct communication (QSDC) don’t just build on classical cryptography, they redefine what security means by using the laws of physics themselves.

We’re still in the early stages. Quantum computers aren’t powerful enough yet to crack modern encryption, but they’re getting there. That’s why governments, research labs, and cybersecurity professionals around the world aren’t waiting. They’re investing in quantum-resistant cryptography now to stay ahead of the threat.

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