China launches 'unhackable', quantum-secured smartphone

By Xinhua  https://www.chinadailyhk.com/article/271882


  *   "The key is randomly generated, hard to crack and discarded immediately 
after calling," Zhang added.



  *   The service is available when both senders and recipients use the 
quantum-based phone.


BEIJING - A Chinese telecom service provider rolled off a smartphone using 
quantum tech that can ensure the user chat on the device is almost "unhackable."

Launched by China Telecom, Tianyi No 1 2022 is a smartphone mounted with a 
quantum-secured encryption module and purpose-built SIM card that can encrypt 
and decipher voice calls on the phone using the quantum key distribution, 
Science Daily reported Tuesday.

Chinese scientists, some of whom were part of the founding team of 
QuantumCTeck, tested the quantum key distribution with the world's first 
quantum satellite Micius launched in August 2016

The telecom giant and the startup QuantumCTeck set up a joint venture in 2021 
to develop quantum-based communication and bring the ingenious know-how to 
market.

Chinese scientists, some of whom were part of the founding team of 
QuantumCTeck, tested the quantum key distribution with the world's first 
quantum satellite Micius launched in August 2016.

Unlike traditional cryptography, the technology uses single photons in quantum 
superposition states by which the key is embedded to guarantee unconditional 
security between distant parties.

Quantum superposition is a fundamental principle of quantum mechanics, stating 
that, much like waves in classical physics, any two or more quantum states can 
be added together.

The communication is, therefore, "unhackable" as any attempt to intercept the 
key would be known immediately both to the sender and the intended recipient.

"When a user initiates a quantum-secured chat, a secret key will be generated 
at random to verify his or her identity," said Zhang Rutong, an engineer with 
QuantumCTeck. "After verification, the quantum network will generate a new 
real-time key to encrypt voice data."

"The key is randomly generated, hard to crack and discarded immediately after 
calling," Zhang added.

The service is available when both senders and recipients use the quantum-based 
phone.

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