Recently the New York Times reported the following:
Turing Award Goes to Inventors of Quantum Cryptography
In the 1980s, Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard created
a new kind of encryption that would be impregnable.
The NYT - By Cade Metz - Cade Metz has reported on quantum
technologies since the 1990s.
March 18, 2026
Updated 8:19 a.m. ET
In the mid-1980s, Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard
invented an encryption technology that could theoretically never be broken.
Called quantum cryptography, their technology relied on quantum mechanics, the strange and powerful behavior exhibited by electrons, photons and other very small things.
At the time, their technique was a fascinating but impractical creation. Forty years later, it is poised to become an essential way of protecting the world’s most sensitive information.
On Wednesday, the Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest society of computing professionals, said Drs. Bennett and Brassard had won this year’s Turing Award for their work on quantum cryptography and related technologies. The Turing Award, which was introduced in 1966, is often called the Nobel Prize of computing, and it includes a $1 million prize, which the two scientists will share.
In recent years, companies like Google and Microsoft have made great strides toward building a new kind of computer, called a quantum computer, which also relies on the counterintuitive properties of quantum mechanics. Experts believe that such a machine will soon be powerful enough to crack the encryption techniques that have guarded the world’s secrets since the 1970s.
If that happens, governments, businesses and even individuals will need the cryptographic techniques developed by Dr. Bennett, 82, a researcher at an IBM computer science lab in Yorktown, N.Y., and Dr. Brassard, 70, a professor at the University of Montreal.
The two met in 1979 while swimming in the Atlantic just off the north shore of Puerto Rico. They were taking a break while attending an academic conference in San Juan. Dr. Bennett swam up to Dr. Brassard and suggested they use quantum mechanics to create a bank note that could never be forged.
“It was a bit shocking,” Dr. Brassard remembered in an interview. “That is not something that happens every day.”
Collaborating between Montreal and New York, they applied Dr. Bennett’s idea to subway tokens rather than bank notes. In a research paper published in 1983, they showed that their quantum subway tokens could never be forged, even if someone managed to steal the subway turnstile housing the elaborate hardware needed to read them.
This led to quantum cryptography. After describing their new
form of encryption in a research paper published in 1984, they demonstrated the
technology with a physical experiment five years later.
Called BB84, their system used photons — particles of light — to create encryption keys used to lock and unlock digital data. Thanks to the laws of quantum mechanics, the behavior of a photon changes if someone looks at it. This means that if anyone tries to steal the keys, he or she will leave a telltale sign of the attempted theft — a bit like breaking the seal on an aspirin bottle.
“They introduced a totally new way of thinking about encryption,” said Prineha Narang, a professor of physical sciences and electrical and computer engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles. “The fundamental laws of physics can make it unhackable.”
The importance of this creation was first shown in 1994 when Peter Shor, a researcher at Bell Labs in New Jersey, proved that a quantum computer could break encryption schemes that did not rely on the techniques laid out by Drs. Bennett and Brassard.
That same decade, the two computer scientists took their ideas a step further. Alongside other researchers, they showed that data could be securely transmitted over long distances in a way that many scientists, even Albert Einstein, had deemed impossible.
Called quantum teleportation, their technique relied on a quantum property called “entanglement.” This is when two quantum objects — such as two electrons — are linked to each other, even though they are very far away.
As companies like Google and Microsoft create increasingly powerful quantum computers, quantum teleportation — what Einstein called “spooky action at a distance” — could profoundly change the way data travels from place to place.
Quantum teleportation could move information between quantum computers — and it could do so in a way that prevents anyone from intercepting it. In other words, Drs. Bennett and Brassard helped create what may be the computer networks of the future. And they ensured that these networks could stand up to hackers.
“For a long time, it was not clear how these ideas would be used,” Dr. Narang said. “Now, small companies, large companies and even the U.S. government is trying to deploy this technology.”
Translation
圖靈獎授予量子密碼學發明者
在
1980 年代,Charles
Bennett和Gilles
Brassard發明了一種理論上無法被攻破的新型加密技術
在 1980 年代中期,Charles Bennett和Gilles Brassard發明了一種理論上永遠無法破解的加密技術。
這項技術被稱為量子密碼學,它是基於量子力學 中的電子、光子和其他微小粒子所展現出的奇特而強有力行為。
當時,這項技術令人著迷,但卻不切實際。四十年後,它有望成為保護世界上最敏感資訊的重要手段。
週三,全球最大的電腦專業人士協會 - 美國電腦協會(ACM)宣佈Bennett博士和Brassard博士因其在量子密碼學及相關技術領域的研究而榮獲今年的圖靈獎。圖靈獎設立於1966年,常被譽為電腦界的諾貝爾獎,獎金高達100萬美元,將由兩位科學家共同分享。
近年來,Google和微軟等公司在建立一種名為量子電腦的新型電腦方面取得了長足進展。量子電腦同樣依賴量子力學的反直覺特性。專家認為,這種機器很快就能強大到足以破解自1970年代以來守護世界機密的加密技術。
如果這種情況發生,各國政府、企業甚至個人都將需要Bennett博士(現年82歲,紐約州約克鎮IBM電腦科學實驗室的研究員)和 Brassard博士(現年70歲,蒙特利爾大學教授)開發的加密技術。
兩人於1979年在波多黎各北岸附近的大西洋游泳時相遇。當時他們正在聖胡安參加一個學術會議,並在休息時相遇。Bennett博士游到Brassard博士身邊,提議他們利用量子力學製造一種永遠無法偽造的鈔票。
Brassard博士在一次採訪中回憶道: “這有點令人震驚” , “這種事可不是每天都會發生的。”
他們在滿地可和紐約兩地合作,將Bennett博士的想法應用於地鐵代幣而非鈔票。在1983年發表的一篇研究論文中,他們證明,即使有人設法偷走了裝有讀取代幣所需複雜硬體的地鐵閘機,他們的量子地鐵代幣也永遠無法偽造。
這催生了量子密碼學。在1984年發表的一篇研究論文中描述了他們的新型加密方法後,五年後,他們透過一項物理實驗驗證了這項技術。
他們的系統名為 BB84,使用光子(光粒子)來創建加密密鑰,用於鎖定和解鎖數位資料。基於量子力學定律,光子的行為會因被注視而改變。這意味著,如果有人試圖竊取密鑰,就會留下盜竊未遂的痕跡 - 就像打開阿斯匹靈藥瓶的封條一樣。
加州大學洛杉磯分校物理科學與電子和計算機工程教授Prineha Narang說道:“他們引入了一種全新的加密思路”,“基於物理定律使這種加密方式無法破解。”
這項發明的重要性在1994年首次體現。當時,新澤西州貝爾實驗室的研究員Peter Shor證明,量子電腦可以破解那些不依賴Bennett和Brassard兩位博士所提出的加密方案。
在同一時期,這兩位電腦科學家將他們的想法進一步發展。他們與其他研究人員一起證明,數據可以安全地遠距離傳輸,而許多科學家,甚至包括愛因斯坦,都曾認為這是不可能的。
這項被稱為量子傳送的技術依賴一種名為「糾纏」的量子特性。糾纏是指兩個量子物體 - 例如兩個電子 - 即使相距十分遙遠,也能彼此相連。
隨著Google和微軟等公司不斷開發出功能日益強大的量子計算機, 量子傳送- 愛因斯坦稱之為「幽靈般的超距作用」- 可能會徹底改變數據傳輸的方式。
量子傳送可以在量子電腦之間傳輸訊息,並且能夠防止任何人攔截訊息。換句話說,Bennett博士和Brassard博士幫助創建了未來電腦網路的基礎架構,並確保這些網路能夠抵禦駭客攻擊。
Narang博士說: 「長期以來,這些想法將如何應用尚不明確」 ,「現在,小公司、大公司,甚至美國政府都在嘗試部署這項技術」。
So, two features in the field
of quantum mechanics have made a new kind of encryption impregnable. First, the
laws of quantum mechanics point out that the behavior of a photon will change
if someone looks at it. That means if anyone tries to steal the data, a
telltale sign of an attempted theft could be noted. Second, based on the
quantum property it is pointed out that two electrons are linked to each other,
even though they are very far away. A technique called quantum teleportation is
thus made possible. Apparently, these features could enable us to change
our way to conduct data travels from place to place.
Note:
1. The ACM
A. M. Turing Award (圖靈獎) is an
annual prize given by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) for
contributions of lasting and major technical importance to computer science. The
award is named after Alan Turing, also referred as "Father of Computer
Science", who was a British mathematician and reader in mathematics at the
University of Manchester. Born in London, Turing was raised in southern
England. He graduated from King's College, Cambridge, and in 1938, earned a
doctorate degree from Princeton University. During World War II, Turing worked
for the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, Britain's
codebreaking center that produced Ultra intelligence. He led Hut 8, the section
responsible for German naval cryptanalysis. (Wikipedia)
2. Encryption
keys (加密密鑰) are the
core building blocks of secure communication in cryptography, they’re what lock
(encrypt) and unlock (decrypt) data so only authorized parties can access it. An encryption key is a string of bits
(numbers) used by an algorithm to transform readable data (plaintext) into
unreadable data (ciphertext), and back again. (ChatGPT)
3. Quantum teleportation (量子傳送) refers to the process of
transferring quantum information from one location to another, without
physically moving the particle itself, utilizing entanglement. (ChatGPT)