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A quantum computer has been used for the first time to generate strings of certifiably random numbers. The protocol for doing this, which was developed by a team that included researchers at JPMorganChase and the quantum computing firm Quantinuum, could have applications in areas ranging from lotteries to cryptography – leading Quantinuum to claim it as quantum computing’s first commercial application, though other firms have made similar assertions. Separately, Quantinuum and its academic collaborators used the same trapped-ion quantum computer to explore problems in quantum magnetism and knot theory.
One drawback is that at present, the computational cost of verifying that random numbers have not been spoofed is similar to the computational cost of spoofing them. “New work is needed to develop approaches for which the certification process can run on a regular computer,” Pistoia says. “I think this will remain an active area of research in the future.”
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