There was a section of IBM's quantum computing challenge that had you encrypt/decrypt logical qbits by transforming their phase state to a known degree. If the state was altered in-transit, than the inverse transform will not cancel out correctly.
the challenge also mentioned that for it to work in practice, the qbits themselves would have to be transported somehow.
> Austin was just a bunch of housed and employed people quietly dying because our government is anti-humanist.
Good lord.
It was a once in a century weather event. Austin and Texas in general celebrates a limited government. So you should take responsibility and prepare accordingly.
If you seriously feel like the city government is anti-humanist and out to get you, then maybe you should pack up and leave town immediately.
> I haven't yet heard a rational explanation for just how badly ECDSA mangles the Schnorr protocol in exactly the way that means a lot of implementations end up with horrible security holes.
I thought schnorr was under patent for a bit, so an open alternative was needed? Also ECDSA does allow for recovery of the public key from the signature, which can be useful.
There are several implementations of core across various languages, not including custom forks of core.