The Sword and Laser discussion
Quantum Computing and Cybersecurity novels
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Robyn
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Oct 30, 2018 07:32AM

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I don't know if Neal Stephenson has an quantum computing stories, but Snow Crash comes to mind. Next month's read. Zeroes may also fit your request. Here's Stephenson's Goodread page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...

After On by Rob Reid might be what you're looking for. A new social network enabled by a quantum computer starts to influence people to create the world it wants.

Wouldn’t quantum computing allow for unbreakable codes? A QC against a current computer would be less like David v. Goliath and more like David v. a tank battalion, but QC v. QC would be a perpetual stalemate.
Whoever gets a functional QC first will be able to pillage the world’s databases at will, so that’s a threat, but it still seems years away.

I'm suggesting Halting State. It's plot weaves around a Scotland's/England's/EU's - i forgot the scale - national security war with some external threat. Of course there are some quantum computers involved).
The book starts with an investigation of a theft in an online game, which gathers our 3 main characters together. We follow them as the problem becomes more and more global.
I can't say that the QC is given a lot of explanation - it plays a role only in a single scene or so, but the idea of security and hacking persists from start to end. Apart from that, it's mostly about spy-games and national crisises. With an additional geekiness in form of online games and LARPGs.

Great suggestion. Quite some time back this group read the sequel, Rule 34, at the suggestion of Corey Doctorow, as I recall. Thought at the time Halting State would have been the stronger choice.

Even better, a Q C allows for entangled communication. If someone else eavesdrops on the message it is effectively destroyed.. You don’t need the same type of encryption.

QC, if working as theoretically possible, can do prime factorisation of stupidly big numbers effectively instantly. All modern computing cryptography is based on the fact that division is hard and you can’t quickly (i..e in your life time) do the factorisation.

There are already QC proof coding schemes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-qu...
Books mentioned in this topic
Halting State (other topics)Halting State (other topics)