Network encryption was designed for a world in which adversaries needed to break cryptography in real time to extract value.
Today, threat actors are quietly collecting data, waiting for the day when that information can be cracked with future technology.
With 90% of organizations unprepared for quantum threats, the shift to post-quantum cryptography (PQC) is a structural necessity. Explore the "harvest now, decrypt later" risk and the NIST PQC ...
Google just issued a 2029 deadline to encrypt its systems against quantum computers. Bitcoin may not have the same luxury of ...
Google's new whitepaper says it could take only minutes for a quantum system to crack Bitcoin.
Q-Day’ and the cybersecurity problems it brings could come as early as 2029 as Google accelerates its post-quantum cryptography migration ...
The post-quantum future may be coming sooner than you think, as Google plans to have PQC migration in place by 2029.
D metastructures produce programmable structural colors for optical encryption, with a destruction mechanism that permanently ...
Chinese experts say the post-quantum cryptography standards developed for the US may not be secure enough, and would rather ...
Broadcom is padding post-quantum security with its Emulex SecureHBA adapters now integrated into Everpure’s FlashArray ...
Google’s decision to move up its timeline for migration to post-quantum cryptography highlights that some of the cyber security risks posed by quantum computing are already reality.