Washington (AFP) - The US
National Security Agency is making strides toward building a "quantum
computer" that could break nearly any kind of encryption, The Washington
Post reported Thursday.
The Post said
leaked documents from fugitive ex-NSA contractor Edward Snowden indicate
the computer would allow the secret intelligence agency to break
encryption used to protect banking, medical, business and government
records around the world.
Quantum
computing has been a goal among commercial firms such as IBM because it
could harness the power of atoms and molecules, vastly increasing speed
and security of computers and other devices.
But
experts cited by the newspaper said it was unlikely that the NSA would
be close to creating such a machine without the scientific community
being aware of it.
"It seems improbable that the NSA could be that
far ahead of the open world without anybody knowing it," Scott Aaronson
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology told the daily.
The NSA declined to comment on the report.
The
Post said the leaked documents indicate that the agency carries out
research in large, shielded rooms known as Faraday cages designed to
prevent electromagnetic energy from entering or exiting.
Because
of its vast computing power, a working quantum computer would break the
strongest encryption tools in use today for online activities,
including banking and emails.
Some
technology firms such as Google and Yahoo have said in recent weeks
that they were stepping up efforts to encrypt their communications
following reports that the NSA had been able to break or circumvent many
of the current encryption standards.
A
September report by The New York Times, ProPublica and The Guardian,
also based on leaked documents, said US and British spy agencies are
able to decipher data even with the supposedly secure encryption to make
it private.
The documents
indicated that the NSA, working with its British counterpart GCHQ,
accomplished the feat by using supercomputers, court orders and some
cooperation from technology companies.
If
the reports are accurate, the highly secretive program would defeat
much of what is used to keep data secure and private on the Internet,
from emails to chats to communications using smartphones.
IBM
researchers said last year they had made advances in quantum computing
that has the potential to outperform any existing supercomputer.
The
new type of computing uses information encoded into quantum bits or
qubits, putting into use a theory that scientists have been discussing
for decades.
Quantum
computing expands on the most basic piece of information that a typical
computer understands -- a bit, and thereby can perform millions of
calculations at once.