Today’s society is based on the fast access to information. Getting a head start on information is key in business, finance, politics and security. Most of our information exchange is done via the internet. However, not only has the current structure of our internet its capacity limits but also data transfer is not secure. Therefore, we are in need to invest in a future network, capable of handling the massive data flow and allowing for secure data communication. The solution lies in quantum mechanics, making it possible to encode information on the smallest quanta of energy, a single light particle called photon. This not only reduces energy consumption for information transfer to the physical limit but also allows for totally secure data communication due to the principles of quantum mechanics (No-cloning theorem). Single and entangled photons, as well as highly efficient, low-noise single-photon detectors are important building blocks to realize such quantum networks. The project SiPhoN focused on investigating novel semiconductor nano-scale devices as quantum light sources and developing highly efficient single-photon detectors based on superconducting material in cooperation with the company Single Quantum B.V..