January 2019
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7 Reads
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5 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
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January 2019
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7 Reads
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5 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
January 2019
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2 Reads
SSRN Electronic Journal
June 2018
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457 Reads
May 2018
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166 Reads
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2 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
April 2018
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230 Reads
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2 Citations
Advancements in computer science and technology make quantum computation increasingly possible, which would result in unprecedented computational efficiency and allow quantum physicists and chemists to completely model complex quantum mechanical systems. Quantum algorithms have already shown significant advantages over classical algorithms in terms of both runtime and power. Quantum computation opens up new research opportunities in areas such as machine learning, mathematics, and cryptography. However, quantum computation could also pose a danger to online data security. 1. Introduction Alan Turing catalyzed the beginnings of computer science when he conceived the idea of a programmable machine; this was, of course, the Turing machine, revealed to the world in 1936. Since then, generations of scientists worked to bring today's society the modern computer. With these innovations came immense progress in efficient calculations and communication. While computers today perform algorithmic tasks more quickly than Turing could have ever imagined, researchers in computer science are proposing an even faster method of computation on the basis of quantum mechanical theory. These quantum computers have the potential to significantly outperform their classical counterparts and provide unprecedented computational power. This paper investigates the inner workings and potential applications of quantum computers, proposes viable materials for constructing a quantum computer, discusses monetary restrictions on quantum computer construction, and assesses the impact of quantum computation on data security.
February 2018
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27 Reads
January 2018
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1 Read
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6 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
July 2017
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516 Reads
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4 Citations
April 2017
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364 Reads
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15 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
February 2017
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104 Reads
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9 Citations
SSRN Electronic Journal
... With their high success rate, zero-day attacks typically target high-value targets such as critical infrastructure and financial and medical institutions [9]. Therefore, attackers keep newly discovered vulnerabilities confidential for as long as possible, maximizing the possibility of an attack succeeding [10]. Hence, reliably defending against such attacks requires exploring alternative solutions due to their nature, which has not been seen before [11]. ...
January 2016
SSRN Electronic Journal
... CC: the security persists in CC deployment, cloud vulnerabilities are time by time published and patches are updated according to the security concern (Lamba et al., 2016), all patching is deployed by CSP, and everyone belongs to IT organisations having security concerns. Through customer data, details like bank usage user login ID/password credentials are hacked that why security threats are existent. ...
January 2016
SSRN Electronic Journal
... In the past, such attacks have occurred in the real world; hence, we can say they were real-world attacks (RWA). Examples include Iran's uranium Stuxnet attack in 2010 that caused a sufficient setback to Iran's nuclear program and damaged their centrifuge [8]; the German steel mill attack in 2014 that caused significant loss (the mill avoided blast burning from shutting down) [9]; the power company attack in Ukraine in 2015 that detached small-level stations from the power grid, leaving millions of customers without power for a long time [10]; the similar attack in Ukraine in 2016 on transmission-level substations that disconnected capital without power for more than an hour [11]; and the attacks on the petrochemical plant in Saudi Arabia in 2017 that shut down the safety controller of the plant which could have caused massive loss, damage, or an explosion [12]. Industry, the malware behind the power grid attack in Ukraine in 2016 and the Saudi petrochemical attack in 2017 are still active in targeting energy sectors and electrical power substations [13,14]. ...
January 2017
SSRN Electronic Journal
... Tree Protocol (STP) to transmit STP signals incessantly. to as SU (Server Unit) [22][23][24][25][26]. Every module interacts with the other modules through a set certificate as well as hierarchical rules. ...
January 2016
SSRN Electronic Journal
... Attackers exploit software vulnerabilities in IoT-enabled medical devices, embedding spyware into legitimate applications to capture patient records, login credentials, and financial details [11]. Additionally, supply chain attacks introduce spyware through third-party vendors, bypassing traditional security defenses [12]. ...
January 2018
SSRN Electronic Journal
... Moreover, the launch of general-purpose quantum machines is also expected within this decade to solve the complicated number theory problems, such as discrete logarithmic and factorization, in a specific time, which is a resilient potential threat to block cipher applications (Lindsay 2020;Lamba et al. 2018;Mashatan and Turetken 2020;Kumari and Gupta 2021). It has also been revealed that the low-dimensional chaos-based encryption algorithms (Pérez and Cerdeira 1995;Parker and Short 2001) will suffer the potential loss of confidentiality because of predictable trajectories and small keyspace (Kocarev 2001;Wang et al. 2011;Li et al. 2018). ...
April 2018
... Therefore, conventional information gathering, management, and analysis methods might not operate on this scale [195,196]. Also, the complexity of the data produced by IoT provides a different front for the existing data processing mechanisms [197][198][199][200]. Personal security and data protection are two of the main considerations in the company implementation of IoT facilities and implementations [102,198]. ...
January 2017
... Copula is a function that can combine several single variable marginal distribution functions that are uniform in one dimension into one multivariable distribution function [16]. According to [17,18], copulas can better describe the dependencies between random variables. ...
July 2017
... Instead, IoT can easily take advantage of the decentralized capabilities offered by blockchain networks. From this point onward, future developments of the Internet of Things do not have to rely on centralized services for trust [42][43][44]. The Internet of Things (IoT) and Blockchain integration frameworks have both been the subject of in-depth research in recent scholarly works. ...
April 2017
SSRN Electronic Journal
... and/or GPRS. 9. Dual SIM capability, the 2nd SIM will be used as backup in case there is no connectivity using the 1st SIM. 10. ...
November 2014
SSRN Electronic Journal