Quantum power is calculated in qubits. Every 10 qubits supports 1,024 computations, giving hackers 1,024 times the power to break encryption in one swoop, Steward illustrated. There are now machines ...
Every encrypted text you send today could be stored by an adversary and cracked open years from now by a quantum computer ...
However, Quantum Day (Q-Day) is different. Q-Day is the moment a quantum computer becomes powerful enough to break the encryption standards that protect virtually all sensitive data on the internet ...
Quantum computing could lead to revolutions in cryptography, materials design and telecommunications. But fulfilling those ...
The day when a quantum computer can crack commonly used forms of encryption is drawing closer. The world isn’t prepared, ...
Every time you log into your bank, send an email, or connect to a VPN, encryption quietly does the heavy lifting. The internet feels simple. The security underneath it? Anything but simplicity. That’s ...
Perfect randomness sounds simple, until you try to make it. A die can be polished, balanced and rolled thousands of times.
Somewhere on a server rack in a country that may not be friendly to the Philippines, a file is growing. It contains fragments ...
Secure your AI infrastructure by 2026. Learn to defend Model Context Protocol (MCP) against Store Now, Decrypt Later (SNDL) attacks with hybrid cryptography.
As decryption capabilities advance, so do the strategies of sophisticated adversaries. HNDL is a present-day threat. Adversaries may collect encrypted or signed data today with the intent to decrypt ...
IBM plans to invest over $10B in quantum computing by 2029, targeting its fault-tolerant Quantum Starling system. Here's what ...
This research might also help pave the way for the quantum internet and other quantum systems in 40-50 years. Computer scientists with Toshiba Europe recently distributed quantum encryption keys ...