Online data is generally pretty secure. Assuming everyone is careful with passwords and other protections, you can think of it as being locked in a vault so strong that even all the world’s ...
In December 2024, a team at Google published a result in Nature that physicists had been chasing for nearly three decades: a ...
The amount of quantum computing power needed to crack a common data encryption technique has been reduced tenfold. This makes the encryption method even more vulnerable to quantum computers, which may ...
The takeaway: Experts have long warned about the threat that conventional cryptography faces from quantum computers, potentially undermining the foundational security of all digital encryption. New ...
Just this past month, both Google’s Quantum AI team and a Cal Tech startup named Oratomic both produced papers that stated ...
Building a utility-scale quantum computer that can crack one of the most vital cryptosystems—elliptic curves—doesn’t require ...
Quantum computing encryption is reshaping how we think about digital security in a world built on encrypted communication. Today's systems rely on mathematical complexity, but emerging quantum ...
In August 2024, the National Institute of Standards and Technology did something it had been working toward for eight years: it finalized the first three cryptographic standards built to withstand ...
IBM Consulting & Entrust partners to modernise enterprise cryptography and migrate to quantum safe security posture with ...
The quantum computing future is rapidly reshaping how scientists think about computation, with machines moving toward fault-tolerant systems capable of solving problems beyond classical limits. From ...
The quantum computing power required to break the encryption that secures blockchains continues to decline, at least in theory, raising the question of whether the industry can migrate to ...
Quantum computing marks a major change in how we process information. It goes beyond the binary limits of classical "bits," which exist only as 0 or 1. Instead, it uses "qubits" that can exist in ...