Singapore ups investment in quantum computing to stay ahead of security threats

Singapore ups investment in quantum computing to stay ahead of security threats

Chinese firm Huawei, which is one of four firms that has invested $200 million in quantum computers in Singapore, plans to undergo quantum computing research in the first quarter of next year, according to a company report.

Quantum computers are likely to be able to contribute to today’s security threat, as the quantum computing workforce grows exponentially.

But a Malaysia office still has to decide whether to let its quantum computers enter the market, according to the Reuters figures.

“The Malaysian Minister of Commerce and Industry, Datuk Seri Naish Dhugarat, is being asked to have all ‘quantum’ products in place, including devices that are capable of quantum computing,” said a Malaysian acting head of police.

“There are significant obstacles in the way of a firm getting ready for a potential announcement.”

Malaysia has traditionally been a staunch privacy advocate, but a new law legislating in November bans the sale and use of quantum devices.

In the first quarter of next year, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said his company would make “many more announcements regarding the development of quantum computers” in 2013.

But research into the potential of quantum computing was delayed by the government, as other firms got their own quantum computers in 2011.

Quantum computers have become a global industry, with researchers at Britain’s Department for Energy, which uses quantum computing technology, saying it might prevent accessing user data.

But the United States has a hit on its hands, with the National Security Agency being warned by the National Security Agency on Monday about possible hackers becoming an accessory to the oppression of dissidents.

Dr. Yitong Ok, an expert at the Pratham House think tank, said he had seen the story of the encryption 17 years ago in a “very interesting and prolific piece” published in the part of the technology blogosphere.

The author said the recent crackdown on state-owned Chinese firms in China was a step in the right direction, but that the government had also failed to ensure that state-owned firms were not operating against the national interests.

The story he said was inspired by a story of a recently discovered computer virus known as the antivirus/debugging tool “Yantai,” which was codenamed “the cyberware of today.”

The U.S. state department warned that hackers could attempt to hack silver-manufacturing companies and shut them down.

Agencies have also reported viruses that can switch from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and at least one such virus is at least 18 that could be U.S. government-owned.

(Additional reporting by Patrick Ryo in Bangalore, and Evan Goepel in Jakarta)

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