
Toward a Quantum-Safe Communication Infrastructure
Description
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This book presents 11 papers from the NATO Advanced Research Workshop (ARW) on Quantum and Post-Quantum Cryptography, hosted in Malta in November 2021. The workshop set out to understand and reconcile two seemingly divergent points of view on post-quantum cryptography and secure communication: would it be better to deploy post-quantum cryptographic (PQC) algorithms or quantum key distribution (QKD)? The workshop brought these two communities together to work towards a future in which the two technologies are seen as complementary solutions to secure communication systems at both a hardware (QKD) and software (PQC) level, rather than being in competition with each other. Subjects include the education of an adequate workforce and the challenges of adjusting university curricula for the quantum age; whether PQC and QKD are both required to enable a quantum-safe future and the case for hybrid approaches; and technical aspects of implementing quantum-secure communication systems. The efforts of two NATO nations to address the possible emergence of cryptanalytically-relevant quantum computers are explored, as are two cryptographic applications which go beyond the basic goal of securing two-party communication in a post-quantum world.
The book includes economic and broader societal perspectives as well as the strictly technical, and adds a helpful, new contribution to this conversation.
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Preface
- Contents
- A Brief Overview of Quantum Advances and Impact on Economics
- Post-Quantum Cryptography Migration: Challenges in Education
- PQC and QKD Are Both Required to Enable a Quantum-Safe Future
- Quantum-Safe Cryptography from BSI's Perspective
- Security Against Attacks to Cryptographic Algorithms by Quantum Computer - And Why Multiple Different Solutions Are Needed
- Authentication Methods for Quantum Key Distribution: Challenges and Perspectives
- Securing DILITHIUM Against Physical Attacks: Performances Analysis
- Quantum-Safe Communication Research in Finland
- Post-Quantum Cryptography Efforts in Turkiye
- Group Key Exchange: Living on the Edge with a Quantum Adversary
- Beyond Quantum Threats: Bridging Fully Homomorphic Encryption Schemes
- Subject Index
- Author Index
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