https://www.science.org/content/article/worried-quantum-computers-will-supercharge-hacking-white-house-calls-encryption-shift

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Quantum computers—exotic machines that can solve practical problems that would 
stymie any conventional supercomputer—remain years or decades away. However, 
yesterday President Joe Biden’s administration took a step to anticipate the 
eventual deployment of such machines. In a new national security memorandum, 
the White House instructs federal agencies to prepare to shift from the 
encryption algorithms used today to secure communications on the internet and 
other networks to new algorithms resistant to attack by a quantum computer.

The memo envisions the shift beginning in 2024, when the first standard for 
such “post-quantum cryptography” should emerge, and being complete before 2035. 
Fortunately for internet companies, such postquantum cryptography will involve 
changes mostly in software. “You don’t need a quantum computer to implement 
these postquantum solutions,” says Dustin Moody, a mathematician with the 
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Still, he says, “The 
transition should be quite challenging, as with any crypto transition that 
we’ve done.”

Whereas a conventional computer processes information by flipping bits that can 
be set to 0 or 1, a quantum computer manipulates quantum bits or qubits that 
can be set to 0, 1, or, thanks to the weird rules of quantum mechanics, 0 and 1 
at the same time. Such two-ways-at-once states enable a quantum computer to 
encode all possible solutions to certain problems as abstract quantum waves. 
Set things up right and, in the guts of the machine, the waves will interfere 
so that the incorrect solutions cancel one another, and the right solution pops 
out.

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