Quantum computer mines cryptocurrency using less energy

A D-Wave Advantage2 quantum computer is successfully participating in an experimental blockchain called Quip, winning most of the blocks it competes for while consuming far less power than conventional machines.

The Quip network has operated since April with a proof-of-work system based on optimization problems. Most participants use standard computers, yet the Advantage2 machine, available for only about five minutes daily, wins 92 percent of the blocks it enters.

Colton Dillion of Postquant Labs reported that the quantum system averages 12.5 watts to win a block, compared with 1,334 watts for typical machines. D-Wave chief executive Alan Baratz stated at a 1 June investor presentation that quantum computing offers energy-efficient solutions for difficult problems.

The network was designed to resist attacks from future quantum computers. Experts note both the potential for lower energy use and the higher capital costs of quantum hardware, with other companies also exploring similar quantum proof-of-work approaches.

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US government officials investing in quantum computing companies for a news article
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US government to take $2 billion equity stake in quantum firms

AI द्वारा रिपोर्ट किया गया AI द्वारा उत्पन्न छवि

The US commerce department announced it will take equity stakes totaling $2 billion in nine quantum computing companies. The move includes funding for firms like IBM and GlobalFoundries as well as startups with ties to prominent investors.

Two recent studies indicate quantum computers could crack elliptic curve cryptography—securing banks, internet traffic, and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin—with far fewer qubits than previously estimated: around 10,000-30,000 for one approach or 500,000 for another. Researchers highlight rapid hardware progress, urging a shift to post-quantum standards.

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Researchers have developed a mathematical approach showing quantum computers could efficiently process large datasets for AI tasks. By loading data in batches like streaming, the method avoids massive memory needs. A machine with just 60 logical qubits could outperform classical systems by decade's end.

Tezos developers have launched a prototype for private payments that resists quantum computing attacks. The system employs zk-stark proofs to safeguard encrypted blockchain data against future threats.

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Andrew Gault warns that bitcoin faces a greater quantum threat from encrypted messages moving between institutions than from exposed wallet keys. He points to a harvest-now-decrypt-later strategy already in use by adversaries.

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