On top of technological supremacy, the quantum race could reshape the very nature of international relations and global power dynamics Imagine a world where encrypted data is no longer secure, medical advancements are accelerating and governments compete for power in an unseen realm.
Advances like these lead me to believe that useful quantum computing is inevitable and increasingly imminent. And that’s good news, because the hope is that they will be able to perform calculations that no amount of AI or classical computation could ever achieve.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang may have said that "very useful quantum computers" are probably still 20 years away, but his company is also hedging its bets
President Joe Biden issued an executive order Thursday aimed at strengthening U.S. cybersecurity defenses and cracking down on foreign hackers targeting critical infrastructure.
Quantum computing has the potential of being the next big innovation. At the right size and the right price, it might even be investable.
As AI research and development continue, a recent breakthrough has emerged in the equally transformative field of quantum computing.
IonQ stock is losing ground today due to news that the U.S. will implement more restrictive export limitations on artificial intelligence ( AI) chips. The company's share price is also falling in conjunction with recent comments from Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg. But there is a bright spot for investors.
Developments in quantum computing highlight the risk to financial institutions and national security if new encryption measures aren't developed.
An executive order issued by President Joe Biden just days before he leaves office aims to shore up America's cyber defenses while making it easier to go after foreign countries that launch cyberattac
Stocks of quantum computing companies jumped Wednesday after Microsoft declared this as “the year to become quantum-ready,” adding “we are at the advent of the reliable quantum computing era.” Shares of Rigetti Computing and D-Wave Quantum were both up more than 22 percent.
Amid stock-market jitters, quantum computing start-ups continue to make progress — and to score hundreds of millions of dollars in investments.
As U.S.-China competition for quantum technology intensifies, the Trump administration should prioritize advancing and protecting the country’s