PR: BBN Technologies Unveils World's First
Quantum Cryptography Network
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
BBN Technologies Unveils World's First Quantum Cryptography
Network
Quantum cryptography breakthrough delivers absolute security
based on laws of physics
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 3, 2004 -- BBN Technologies announced
today that it has built the world's first quantum
cryptography network and is now operating it continuously
beneath the streets of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Today the
DARPA Quantum Network links BBN's campus to Harvard
University; soon it will stretch across town to include
Boston University as a third link. The Harvard University
Applied Physics Department and the Boston University
Photonics Center have worked in close collaboration with BBN
to build the network under Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) sponsorship.
Information traveling over open networks such as the
Internet is often encrypted to prevent unauthorized
eavesdropping. Currently, complex mathematical algorithms
are the most common method used to scramble (encrypt) and
de-scramble (decrypt) messages that require secure
transmission. Although this method can provide high levels
of security, it is not infallible. In contrast, the DARPA
Quantum Network introduces extremely high levels of security
for Internet-based communications systems by encrypting and
decrypting messages with keys created by quantum
cryptography.
Quantum cryptography, invented by Charles Bennett and Giles
Brassard in the 1980s, prepares and transmits single photons
of light, through either fiber optic cable or the
atmosphere, to distribute cryptographic keys that are used
to encrypt and decrypt messages. This method of securing
information is radically different from methods based on
mathematical complexity, relying instead on fundamental
physical laws. Because very small (quantum) particles are
changed by any observation or measurement, eavesdropping on
a quantum cryptography system is always detectable.
The DARPA Quantum Network has improved on these techniques
to create a highly robust, six-node network that is both
extremely secure and 100% compatible with today's Internet
technology. Patent-pending BBN protocols pave the way for
robust quantum networks on a larger scale by providing "any
to any" networking of quantum cryptography through a mesh of
passive optical switches and cryptographic key relays.
"People think of quantum cryptography as a distant
possibility," said Chip Elliott, a Principal Scientist at
BBN and leader of its quantum engineering team, "but the
DARPA Quantum Network is up and running today underneath
Cambridge. BBN has built a set of high-speed, full-featured
quantum cryptography systems and has woven them together
into an extremely secure network."
"This kind of breakthrough is the essence of BBN," said Tad
Elmer, president and CEO of BBN. "We were ahead of the
technology curve with the ARPANET and the first router, and
our quantum network exemplifies the same kind of forward
thinking and innovation that has made BBN a technology
leader for over 50 years."
About BBN Technologies
BBN Technologies was established as Bolt Beranek and Newman
Inc. in 1948. From its roots as an acoustical design
consulting firm, BBN grew to implement and operate the
ARPANET (the forerunner of today's Internet) and develop the
first network email, which established the @ sign as an icon
for the digital age. Today BBN Technologies provides
technical expertise and innovation to both government and
commercial customers. Areas of expertise include: quantum
information, speech and language processing, networking,
information security, and acoustic technologies. BBN has
more than 600 employees in offices across the US. For more
information, visit www.bbn.com.
Media Contact:
Joyce Kuzmin
617-873-8193
jkuzmin@bbn.com
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