RESTRICTEDTECHNOLOGY

Quantum Computing

The emerging technology that uses quantum mechanical phenomena to perform computations beyond the reach of classical computers, with implications for encryption, medicine, and AI.

CREDIBILITY
60%
RABBIT HOLE
60%

INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW

Quantum computing harnesses quantum mechanical phenomena such as superposition and entanglement to process information in ways classical computers cannot. By the mid-2020s, companies including IBM, Google, and Microsoft have demonstrated quantum processors with over 1,000 qubits. Google's 2019 demonstration of 'quantum supremacy' showed a quantum computer performing a calculation in minutes that would take a classical supercomputer thousands of years. However, practical applications remain limited. The field faces major challenges in error correction, qubit stability, and scaling. If realized, quantum computing could break current encryption standards (including RSA), revolutionize drug discovery, and accelerate AI development. The NSA and other intelligence agencies have invested heavily in post-quantum cryptography.

KEY CLAIMS

Quantum supremacy has been demonstrated, but practical quantum advantage remains years away

Future quantum computers will break RSA and most current public-key cryptography

Quantum computing could revolutionize drug discovery by simulating molecular interactions

Error-corrected qubits stable enough for practical computation may be 10–15 years away

Governments are secretly advancing quantum computing faster than publicly acknowledged

SUPPORTING EVIDENCE

Google's Sycamore processor completed a task in 200 seconds that would take Summit supercomputer 10,000 years

The NSA has published post-quantum cryptography standards for industry adoption

Drug discovery simulations on quantum processors have shown initial success for small molecules

Current qubits are 'noisy' and require extensive error correction, limiting practical use

Patent filings for quantum computing have increased exponentially since 2015

COUNTER ARGUMENTS

Google's quantum supremacy claim has been contested; classical algorithms narrowed the gap

No quantum computer has demonstrated a commercially useful advantage over classical systems

Post-quantum cryptography is being standardized and can protect against future quantum attacks

Error correction requires millions of physical qubits for a single logical qubit

The timeline for practical quantum computing has consistently been overestimated

TIMELINE

1994

Shor's algorithm proves quantum computers could factor large numbers

2019-10

Google claims quantum supremacy with Sycamore processor

2023

IBM unveils 1,121-qubit Condor processor

2024

NIST publishes post-quantum cryptography standards

KEY FIGURES

John Preskill

Caltech physicist who coined 'quantum supremacy'

Sundar Pichai

CEO of Google, which demonstrated quantum supremacy

Michele Hebert

VP of Quantum at Microsoft

ORGANIZATIONS

Google Quantum AI

Research

IBM Quantum

Research

NSA

Intelligence

NIST

Government

SOURCES

Nature — Quantum Supremacy Using a Programmable Processor (2019)Academic Paper
NIST — Post-Quantum Cryptography StandardsGovernment Standard
Quantum Computing — Computer Science NewsNews

RELATED ENTITIES

PEOPLE

John Preskill

Sundar Pichai

Michele Hebert

ORGANIZATIONS

Google Quantum AI

IBM Quantum

NSA

NIST

TECHNOLOGIES

Quantum

Encryption

EVENTS

Shor's algorithm proves quantum computers could factor large numbers

1994

Google claims quantum supremacy with Sycamore processor

2019-10

IBM unveils 1,121-qubit Condor processor

2023

NIST publishes post-quantum cryptography standards

2024

RELATED DOSSIERS

TAGS

#quantum#computing#qubit#cryptography#supremacy#encryption

Shadow Archive separates documented facts from claims, counterarguments, and open questions. It does not present unsupported allegations as confirmed fact.