Death of the Crypto King: A Quantum Computer Techno Thriller (The Stanton Crimes Book 2)

About

You read to relax? You relax to be creative, think about your future? You read a mystery about crime to protect yourself, your family, your bank account, your community? This book describes crime as you probably could not imagine. Crime is growing with technology.
In your lifetime, technological revolutions are happening with ever increasing speed. Technology that you use every day but don’t understand unless you are a PHD in physics is used to operate I-phones, spacecraft, GPS, even such mundane things like television; artificial Intelligence, AI, driven by new superfast microchips, and gene therapy. You have no idea how these things work, but you use them. You use the internet and online banking.
And crime is also using new technologies to break into your bank account, finance terrorism, stealing, blackmail, extort, and murder.
This book describes crime using new technologies that are unimaginable. You may think, it’s science fiction, but it’s not: Quantum mechanics, quantum computers are a million times faster than current classic computers. Companies like Google, IBM, and Microsoft are developing quantum computers that will revolutionize civilization. I will try to give simple explanations in the text.
This is the second book in a series about cybercriminals and the detective work of one of the world’s most successful investigators of cybercrimes, conspiracies, extorsions, and related murders. Don’t try to understand quantum mechanics. They defy rational thinking. Even Einstein disputed it, entanglement of matter that he called “Spooky action at a distance”: Two entangled atoms react to each other across any distance. Quantum computers can break into any bank account, getting around passwords and encryption.
Book One, My final Crime, is about crypto crime, a conspiracy that used murder to protect its algorithm. Book Two is the Death of the Crypto King: The crime boss, who used a quantum computer to steal hundreds of millions. In Book Three the crime boss uses his stolen billions to finance a small country and an army. Theft does not die. It has a history of many thousands of years. Nations were built with murder and theft. The Roman Empire financed its armies by allowing two days of unlimited looting, plunder, rape, and slavery in conquered cities. Monarchies fought each other decade by decade. And think of today’s wars. Technology is growing. And greed grows with it.