Cornami Partners with Inpher, Pioneer in Secret Computing, to Deliver Quantum-Secure Privacy-Preserving Computing on Encrypted Data

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CAMPBELL, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Cornami and Inpher announced today their partnership to collaborate on delivering commercially viable Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) functionality to the market. FHE has long been described as transformative for data privacy and cloud security as it enables computing on encrypted data sets, thereby keeping the underlying data secure. However, existing FHE algorithms are computationally intensive and have been often considered as not yet practical for real world applications. Cornami’s partnership with Inpher overcomes such limitations to deliver real-time FHE computing to a ready and rapidly expanding market. Inpher is a cryptographic Secret Computing® company that powers privacy-preserving AI and analytics. Secret Computing has brought years of academic research in secure Multi-Party Computation (MPC)...

Rust Could Be the Secret to Next-Gen Computing

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Current silicon-based computing technology is very energy-inefficient. Information and communications technology (ICT) projected to use over 20% of global electricity production1 by 2030. So finding ways to decarbonise technology is an obvious target for energy savings. Professor Paolo Radaelli from Oxford’s Department of Physics, working with Diamond Light Source, the UK’s national synchrotron, has been leading research into alternatives to silicon which would bring greater efficiency. His group’s surprising findings are published in Nature today - 'Antiferromagnetic half-skyrmions and bimerons at room temperature.' – Cosmic Whirls in Rust, some of the antiferromagnetic textures they have found could emerge as prime candidates for low-energy antiferromagnetic spintronics at room temperature.Researchers have...