QKD
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Quantum encryption company Arqit has made its QuantumCloud service available to customers on Amazon Web Services (AWS).
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South Korean operator SK Telecom has succeeded in getting its approaches to quantum-era securing considered as global standards.
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The world’s largest bank has teamed up with Ciena and Toshiba to develop quantum technology that can deliver 800Gbps channels and a total speed of 2.4Tbps.
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The security that the internet has relied on for decades is broken. Fortunately, the cavalry, in the form of quantum keys, is riding to the rescue, writes Alan Burkitt-Gray
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Toshiba says that it has developed photonic integrated circuits that can use quantum technology to encrypt metro communications with speeds of 100Gbps.
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BT is to build what it calls the world’s first quantum-secured commercial metro network, operating from London to Bristol.
Forthcoming events
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Quantum satellite start-up Arqit has signed a deal with Juniper Networks to explore network security technology.
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A UK company has started what it calls the country’s first quantum computing as-a-service (QCaaS) platform.
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KPN plans to build a Netherlands-wide quantum-secure telecoms network using its existing fibre infrastructure.
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A start-up company that is expected to be valued at US$1.4 billion by the end of August is launching its quantum-based telecoms encryption service in the middle of July.
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German chancellor Angela Merkel has taken part in the presentation of IBM’s first quantum computer to a European research institution.
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Toshiba’s UK laboratory in Cambridge has pushed the distance for secure quantum communications to 600km.