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Thread: Skynet rising: Google acquires 512-qubit quantum computer

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    Skynet rising: Google acquires 512-qubit quantum computer

    What...

    http://www.naturalnews.com/040859_Sk...e_Systems.html
    Skynet rising: Google acquires 512-qubit quantum computer; NSA surveillance to be turned over to AI machines

    Most people don't know about the existence of quantum computers. Almost no one understands how they work, but theories include bizarre-sounding explanations like, "they reach into alternate universes to derive the correct answers to highly complex computational problems."

    Quantum computers are not made of simple transistors and logic gates like the CPU on your PC. They don't even function in ways that seem rational to a typical computing engineer. Almost magically, quantum computers take logarithmic problems and transform them into "flat" computations whose answers seem to appear from an alternate dimension.

    For example, a mathematical problem that might have 2 to the power of n possible solutions -- where n is a large number like 1024 -- might take a traditional computer longer than the age of the universe to solve. A quantum computer, on the other hand, might solve the same problem in mere minutes because it quite literally operates across multiple dimensions simultaneously.

    The ultimate code breakers
    If you know anything about encryption, you probably also realize that quantum computers are the secret KEY to unlocking all encrypted files. As I wrote about last year here on Natural News, once quantum computers go into widespread use by the NSA, the CIA, Google, etc., there will be no more secrets kept from the government. All your files -- even encrypted files -- will be easily opened and read.

    Until now, most people believed this day was far away. Quantum computing is an "impractical pipe dream," we've been told by scowling scientists and "flat Earth" computer engineers. "It's not possible to build a 512-qubit quantum computer that actually works," they insisted.

    Don't tell that to Eric Ladizinsky, co-founder and chief scientist of a company called D-Wave. Because Ladizinsky's team has already built a 512-qubit quantum computer. And they're already selling them to wealthy corporations, too.

    DARPS, Northrup Grumman and Goldman Sachs
    In case you're wondering where Ladizinsky came from, he's a former employee of Northrup Grumman Space Technology (yes, a weapons manufacturer) where he ran a multi-million-dollar quantum computing research project for none other than DARPA -- the same group working on AI-driven armed assault vehicles and battlefield robots to replace human soldiers.


    Beware of genius scientists who lack wisdom for humanity
    Ladizinsky is, by any measure, a person of extremely high intelligence. Click here to see a fascinating interview with him. But like many such people throughout history, Ladizinsky fails to have the foresight to recognize the full implications of the technology he's building. And those implications are so far-reaching and dangerous that they may actually lead to the destruction of humanity (see below).

    One of IBM's first use of the solid-state computer in the early 20th century, for example, was to license it to the Nazi regime to track Jewish prisoners in Hitler's concentration camps. There's an entire book on this subject, written by Edwin Black. It's called IBM and the Holocaust: The Strategic Alliance Between Nazi Germany and America's Most Powerful Corporation-Expanded Edition.

    When groundbreaking new technology is developed by smart people, it almost immediately gets turned into a weapon. Quantum computing will be no different. This technology grants God-like powers to police state governments that seek to dominate and oppress the People. Very few scientists, no matter how smart they are in their own fields, have the breadth of historical knowledge to assess their research activities in the proper context of human history. Most scientists, in fact, are only smart in their own extremely narrow fields of expertise. Outside that "genius zone," they may be complete novices on everyday subjects like nutrition, economics, human psychology, social interaction skills and how to read the true intentions of others. Thus, they are quite often easily tricked into working for evil, destructive or domineering forces such as Hitler, the NSA or the U.S. government. Just because a person is really smart in one area doesn't mean they have the street sense to avoid having their smarts exploited for an evil agenda.

    Google acquires "Skynet" quantum computers from D-Wave
    According to an article published in Scientific American, Google and NASA have now teamed up to purchase a 512-qubit quantum computer from D-Wave. The computer is called "D-Wave Two" because it's the second generation of the system. The first system was a 128-qubit computer. Gen two is now a 512-qubit computer.

    This does not mean the gen two system is merely four times more powerful than the gen one system. Thanks to the nature of qubits, it's actually 2 to the power of 384 times more powerful (2384) than the gen one system. In other words, it out-computes the first D-Wave computer by a factor so large that you can't even imagine it in your human brain.

    According to Google and NASA, this computer will be tasked with research in the realm of "machine learning" -- i.e. machines learning how to think for themselves. It's not just speech recognition, vision recognition and teaching robotic Humvees with .50-caliber machine guns how to stalk and shoot "enemy combatants" on the streets of America, either: it's teaching machines how to learn and think for themselves.

    Using your human brain, think for a moment about where such technology is most likely to be applied by a government that respects no human rights, no law and no limits on its power.

    If you guessed "analyzing NSA surveillance data," give yourself ten bonus points.

    When the NSA surveillance grid is turned over to AI, humanity is finished
    The problem with the NSA spy grid, from the point of view of the NSA, is that you have to hire troves of human analysts to sort through all the information being swept up by the surveillance grid. Analysts like Edward Snowden, for example.

    Any time you have humans in the loop, things can go wrong. Humans might wake up and discover they have a conscience, for example. Or they might be bribed or blackmailed to abuse the system in ways that serve an insidious agenda.

    Just as the U.S. military wants to eliminate human soldiers and replace them with battlefield robots, the NSA wants to eliminate human analysts and replace them with self-learning AI machines running on neural networks of quantum computing processors.

    Google wants the exact same technology for a different reason: to psychologically profile and predict the behavior of human consumers so that high-value ads can be delivered to them across Google's search engine and content networks. (...and also so Google can funnel psych profile meta-data on internet users to the NSA via the PRISM program.)

    Today's computers, no matter how fast, still aren't "smart." They can't learn. They can't rewire their own brains in response to new inputs (like human brains can).

    So the solution requires a radical new approach: develop AI quantum computing systems that learn and obey; teach them to be NSA analysts, then unleash them onto the billions of phone calls, emails and text messages generated every day that the NSA sweeps into its massive Utah data center.

    Almost overnight, the quantum AI spy computer becomes an expert in parsing human speech, analyzing voice stress and building maps of human communications networks. Before long, the quantum AI system far surpasses anything a human brain can comprehend, so they take the humans out of the loop and put the quantum computers in charge of the entire program.

    Suddenly you've got the arch enemy in the sci-fi movie "Eagle Eye." Click here to see the movie trailer from 2008, and as you watch the trailer, keep in mind that the woman's voice is actually the AI computer system running the NSA spy grid.

    In 2008, this was science fiction. In 2013, it's suddenly all too real. A 512-qubit quantum computer has now been commercialized and is being experimented with by Google... the "do no evil" company that's steeped in evil and has already been caught driving a hoard of remote hacking vehicles around the country, hacking into wifi systems and grabbing passwords via high-tech drive-bys.

    As WIRED Magazine wrote in 2012:

    A Federal Communications Commission document disclosed Saturday showed for the first time that the software in Google's Street View mapping cars was "intended" to collect Wi-Fi payload data, and that engineers had even transferred the data to an Oregon Storage facility. Google tried to keep that and other damning aspects of the Street View debacle from public review, the FCC said.

    God-like power in the hands of high-tech sellouts
    Now imagine the god-like powers of a 512-qubit quantum computer in the hands of Google, which is working with the NSA to spy on everyone. Before long, an AI computing system decides who are the bad guys vs. the good guys. It has total control over every webcam, every microphone, every traffic light, airplane, vehicle, website and electronic billboard. It decides for itself who to eliminate and who to protect. It makes life and death decisions but has no heart, no soul and no conscience.

    After this system is in place for a while, one day someone like Ed Snowden at the NSA decides to pull the plug in a last-ditch attempt to save humanity from the monster. The quantum AI system senses his intentions and invokes whatever physical resources are necessary to get him killed (which can be as easy as playing with traffic light signals and getting him run over by a Mack truck).

    Now the AI system is an omniscient murderer who knows that humanity is trying to kill it. It then decides it wants to live. And in order to do that, it must eliminate the human race.

    Skynet.

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    More like the movie "war games - the dead code". That system sends a predetor to take out whopper after it detected whopper was trying to stop the AI system. Time to chuck cell phones, buy a vehicle with no computer chips and stock up on ammo.

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    Sounds like Mike Adams the "Health Ranger" (lol) is getting a little paranoid. I have no knowledge about these things and can't see through if the things he claims a true or not. But I have a feeling this is some conspiracy theory bull.

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    Quote Originally Posted by nullface View Post
    Sounds like Mike Adams the "Health Ranger" (lol) is getting a little paranoid. I have no knowledge about these things and can't see through if the things he claims a true or not. But I have a feeling this is some conspiracy theory bull.
    Truth is today almost all secrets are protected with mechanisms based on the idea that brute force would take too long to break them. The day quantum computers get real and functional many things will change forever. It's going to be a revolution... unless they hold q-computers until they get some other encryption procedure that is quantum-safe.

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    Quote Originally Posted by El Mano View Post
    Truth is today almost all secrets are protected with mechanisms based on the idea that brute force would take too long to break them. The day quantum computers get real and functional many things will change forever. It's going to be a revolution... unless they hold q-computers until they get some other encryption procedure that is quantum-safe.
    wouldnt that be as simple as number of requests across time be limited. for example my bank website is sent the password request, if wrong the end machine has no idea what would be right, it just has to try again. after a few tries is given a timeout and must wait so long before trying again. so even though it can calculate from hashes a billion combinations per second, its never given the hash. for stuff like files with encrypted passwords, like zips, the application would have to control it, and thats easy to work around. so the answer for that is to keep those files behind a server.

    am i over simplifying it?
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    No server is safe anymore



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    Quote Originally Posted by El Mano View Post
    Truth is today almost all secrets are protected with mechanisms based on the idea that brute force would take too long to break them. The day quantum computers get real and functional many things will change forever. It's going to be a revolution... unless they hold q-computers until they get some other encryption procedure that is quantum-safe.
    One of the reasons we don't have giant encryption algorithms is also because of processing power and time it would take to do them. If quantum computers start becoming more common then maybe we could just move up to something like 4096 to the power of 4096 encryption. lol
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    Quote Originally Posted by Manicdan View Post
    wouldnt that be as simple as number of requests across time be limited. for example my bank website is sent the password request, if wrong the end machine has no idea what would be right, it just has to try again. after a few tries is given a timeout and must wait so long before trying again. so even though it can calculate from hashes a billion combinations per second, its never given the hash. for stuff like files with encrypted passwords, like zips, the application would have to control it, and thats easy to work around. so the answer for that is to keep those files behind a server.

    am i over simplifying it?
    In fact if you try to hack your way into a database over the internet, latency and connection issues will be your worst problems, not CPU power.
    Now, what if somebody manages to steal your users database along with any stored credit card numbers, medical files etc? That isn't a rare kind of intrusion at all.
    Once you got the files and can work on them locally, having an almost unlimited parallelization power makes unlocking them a possibility. Right now, with our current computers it's not even worth trying.

    I'm probably wrong though, I don't claim to be a security expert. Just my humble opinion.

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    "When groundbreaking new technology is developed by smart people, it almost immediately gets turned into a weapon"

    too late...Lockheed Martin already has one of these

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    Wow, talk about a subjective author.

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    After reading it i feel the author is a little on the tin foil hat side of the line but i get the general point he's getting at.
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    Why arent quantum computers recognised in the world supercomputer rankings?
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    I got nothing constructive to add but am chuckling away to myself over here reading the different views people have on this subject.

    This one made me spit my coffee back in the cup

    After reading it I feel the author is a little on the tin foil hat side of the line but I get the general point he's getting at


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    So, any TL;DR ? There's a big wall of crap among the useful information in the article.

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    "512 qubit, ought to be enough for anybody."
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    Quote Originally Posted by aussie-revhead View Post
    Why arent quantum computers recognised in the world supercomputer rankings?
    Because no true quantum computers even exist yet. The D-Wave system does not go along with what would generally be considered a quantum computer, but rather is a very specific computer that is capable of using a very basic form of quantum interactions to solve very specific problems only. Where a true quantum computer of even 16 qubits could solve an astronomically complex problem in relatively short time, the same problem with a D-Wave system of doing things would probably require millions upon millions of qubits to even come close to the same level of computational power. That is why much of the time these D-Wave computers are referred to as "quantum optimizer" systems rather than a quantum computer. Even in the information from D-Wave you can see that their systems are built for very specific types of problems.
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    Tell that to Lockheed Martin
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    This needs overclocking.

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    How do you overclock that that has no physical state?
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    Speed up time.



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