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Alibaba’s cloud unit teams with Chinese researchers on
quantum computing
Quantum computing which, in theory, taps the power of quantum mechanics to create better, faster,
smaller computing devices, is a potentially huge opportunity. And now Alibaba's
BABA
Aliyun cloud unit and the Chinese Academy of Sciences have agreed internet marketing newbie ninja
to build a new research facility to further research this field.
Both parties have agreed to build a new Shanghai-based Alibaba Quantum Computing Laboratory
which will look into new security technology for e-commerce and data centers, based on quantum
mechanics. Clearly, security is a huge strategic focus for Alibaba, which is China's largest e-
commerce provider and which runs the data centers running both e-commerce sites and the Aliyun
cloud.
From Alibaba's statement:
Both parties will jointly promote the research, development, dissemination and application of
quantum computing to lay a strong and stable technical foundation for China to push the envelope
on quantum computing.
Quantum computing, which would harness the power of molecules and atoms, is a natural extension
of the continued miniaturization of the computing era , where ever more transistors get packed onto
microprocessors per the edicts of Moore's Law. But moving that to the atomic scale could unleash a
lot more computing power.
Google
GOOG
, IBM
IBM
, Microsoft
MSFT
and other tech superpowers are working on their own quantum computing efforts.
While practical applications for quantum computers are still a ways off, cybersecurity and
cryptography will likely be hot spots. As Stratfor Global Intelligene reported earlier this month,
quantum computers will be able to perform mathematical calculations in a timeframe that today's
computers cannot match. They could, for example, unlock "Shor's algorithm" which is a way to find
the prime factors of any large number. That breakthrough, in turn, would make cracking complex
codes much easier and faster.
"A quantum computer can do in minutes or
hours what a classical computer would take
years or much longer to do. Of course, the
floodgates of stored data will not suddenly
open once Shor's algorithm comes into play;
quantum computers could also be use to
encrypt information far more securely than
is possible with classical computers,
something already under intense study."
This partnership news comes at a time when
Alibaba is pushing its cloud business beyond China to the U.S. and elsewhere where it will compete
with Amazon
AMZN
Web Services and other U.S.-based cloud providers. The company this week said it is investing $1
billion to fund that growth. This joint effort with the Chinese Academy of Sciences is part fo that
investment, an Aliyun spokeswoman said
Sign up for Data Sheet, Fortune's daily newsletter about the business of technology.

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Alibaba’s cloud unit teams with Chinese researchers on quantum computing

  • 1. Alibaba’s cloud unit teams with Chinese researchers on quantum computing Quantum computing which, in theory, taps the power of quantum mechanics to create better, faster, smaller computing devices, is a potentially huge opportunity. And now Alibaba's BABA Aliyun cloud unit and the Chinese Academy of Sciences have agreed internet marketing newbie ninja to build a new research facility to further research this field. Both parties have agreed to build a new Shanghai-based Alibaba Quantum Computing Laboratory which will look into new security technology for e-commerce and data centers, based on quantum mechanics. Clearly, security is a huge strategic focus for Alibaba, which is China's largest e- commerce provider and which runs the data centers running both e-commerce sites and the Aliyun cloud. From Alibaba's statement: Both parties will jointly promote the research, development, dissemination and application of quantum computing to lay a strong and stable technical foundation for China to push the envelope on quantum computing. Quantum computing, which would harness the power of molecules and atoms, is a natural extension of the continued miniaturization of the computing era , where ever more transistors get packed onto microprocessors per the edicts of Moore's Law. But moving that to the atomic scale could unleash a lot more computing power. Google GOOG , IBM IBM , Microsoft MSFT and other tech superpowers are working on their own quantum computing efforts. While practical applications for quantum computers are still a ways off, cybersecurity and cryptography will likely be hot spots. As Stratfor Global Intelligene reported earlier this month, quantum computers will be able to perform mathematical calculations in a timeframe that today's computers cannot match. They could, for example, unlock "Shor's algorithm" which is a way to find the prime factors of any large number. That breakthrough, in turn, would make cracking complex codes much easier and faster.
  • 2. "A quantum computer can do in minutes or hours what a classical computer would take years or much longer to do. Of course, the floodgates of stored data will not suddenly open once Shor's algorithm comes into play; quantum computers could also be use to encrypt information far more securely than is possible with classical computers, something already under intense study." This partnership news comes at a time when Alibaba is pushing its cloud business beyond China to the U.S. and elsewhere where it will compete with Amazon AMZN Web Services and other U.S.-based cloud providers. The company this week said it is investing $1 billion to fund that growth. This joint effort with the Chinese Academy of Sciences is part fo that investment, an Aliyun spokeswoman said Sign up for Data Sheet, Fortune's daily newsletter about the business of technology.