A Saudi University Participates in Developing the First "Unbreakable" Code

Scientists at a Saudi university, in cooperation with a British university and international partners, have developed what are believed to be the first impenetrable security system, by hackers or hackers, and even using quantum computers to penetrate data.
 
According to a report published in the journal Nature Communications, a team from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology and St. Andrews University together with other partners created a "non-porous" code, using "silicon chips" that contain complex structures that cannot be reversed in sending information From one user to another using a one-time key that can never be recreated or intercepted by hackers and hackers.
 
In this new security system, the information is stored in the form of light, and then it is passed through a silicon chip, which bends, divides, and splits the information, according to the British newspaper "Daily Mail".
 
Andrea de Falco, a professor at the University of St Andrews College of Physics and Astronomy, described this technique as "totally impenetrable".
 
Security experts were concerned that hackers or terrorist hackers over the Internet were already storing ready information to break quantum computing as soon as it became reality, but the new system would stop hackers before they reached their goal.
 
Related news
Smart robots are in battle today
Report: Is the United States ready for smart future wars?
Hackers have targeted a number of government agencies in recent weeks
Iranian pirates launch cyber attacks on America
 It should be noted that scientists had proposed the idea of ​​this system under the name of "absolute secrecy" in 1917, as it was also called "one-time plate", a form of coding that has proven to be impossible to break if used correctly.
 
On the new technology, Falco explained: "It is absolutely impenetrable and can be used to protect the confidentiality of mutual communications between users no matter the distance between them, and at a very fast speed close to the maximum light by electronically compatible and inexpensive optical chips."

Join Us
To receive you all new