My understanding is that quantum competing has been taken into account for some moment cryptography. And that memory-hard cryptography basically defeats quantum competing solutions. There are a few methods, but one of them is just very long keys, it’s trivial to make a cryptographic key longer.
So sure, you could defeat some of that with a machine operating with 1024k entangled qbits, (which is… oh man… not an easy task), in which case, wow, congratulations. But what if I increase my key length to 100k? It might take an extra 3 seconds to check the key and log in, but it’ll take an extra 25 years for quantum computing to catch up.
JigglySackles@lemmy.world 8 months ago
Can’t wait to hand write my 32-bit passwords.
cralex@lemmy.zip 8 months ago
My handwriting comes with free encryption at rest. Even I might not be able to read it.
ramjambamalam@lemmy.ca 8 months ago
You haven’t changed your password for 30 days. Reset it now.