Engadget: Researchers break world record for quantum-encrypted communications.
https://www.engadget.com/researchers-set-quantum-secure-communication-distance-record-of-64-miles-104334468.html?src%3Drss

"Researchers in Beijing have set a new quantum secure direct communication 
(QSDC) world record of 102.2 km (64 miles), smashing the previous mark of 18 km 
(11 miles), The Eurasian Times reported. Transmission speeds were extremely 
slow at 0.54 bits per second, but still good enough for text message and phone 
call encryption over a distance of 30 km (19 miles), wrote research lead Long 
Guilu in Nature. The work could eventually lead to hack-proof communication, as 
any eavesdropping attempt on a quantum line can be instantly detected.

"QSDC uses the principal of entanglement to secure networks. Quantum physics 
dictates that entangled particles are linked, so that if you change the 
property of one by measuring it, the other will instantly change, too — 
effectively making hacking impossible. In theory, the particles stay linked 
even if they're light-years apart, so such systems should work over great 
distances.

"The same research team set the previous fiber record, and devised a "novel 
design of physical system with a new protocol" to achieve the longer distance. 
They simplified it by eliminating the "complicated active compensation 
subsystem" used in the previous model. "This enables an ultra-low quantum bit 
error rate (QBER) and the long-term stability against environmental noises."

"As a result, the system can withstand much more so-called channel loss that 
makes it impossible to decode encrypted messages. That in turn allowed them to 
extend the fiber from 28.3km to the record 102.2 km distance. "The experiment 
shows that intercity quantum secure direct communication through the fiber is 
feasible with present-day technology," the team wrote in Nature.

"Researchers in China previously made a secure quantum-enabled video call by 
satellite, but fiber poses a different set of challenges. "If we replace parts 
of the internet today, where more eavesdropping attacks happen, with quantum 
channels, those parts will have the added ability to sense and prevent 
eavesdropping, making communication even safer," said Long.

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