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Showing 20 most recent headlines of 89 Filtered view
Bank Info Security 2 days, 21 hours ago

AI Leaders Are Pulling Ahead on Quantum Readiness

Strong Data Foundations Give AI Leaders an Edge in Quantum SecurityCompanies leading in AI security are also better prepared for quantum threats. New Thales research shows that data visibility, governance, encryption and crypto agility are helping CIOs build stronger foundations for both AI adoption and post-quantum readiness.

Agencies and Industry Coordinate Post-Quantum Migration PlansThe White House convened government officials, quantum companies and researchers to accelerate the transition to post-quantum cryptography, align public-private investments and reinforce a 2030 deadline as advances in quantum computing increase risks to today's encryption.

Today’s encrypted data, such as credentials, may no longer remain confidential in the future because the public-key cryptography protecting it will soon be broken by quantum computers. Although no machine today can break elliptic curve cryptography or RSA, quantum hardware is advancing rapidly and will inevitably change how organizations protect their data. Ciphertext and credentials captured by

Bank Info Security 4 weeks, 1 day ago

Addressing Quantum Readiness in Healthcare Security

Healthcare organizations should prepare for post-quantum cryptography without overreacting to hype, said John Frushour, CISO of New York-Presbyterian Hospital. Stronger encryption standards, commercial software support and attention to medical devices can help providers manage emerging risks.

Bank Info Security 2 months, 3 weeks ago

Europe Preps for Post-Quantum Computing

France Invokes Geopolitical Instability to Mandate 2030 DeadlineA working quantum computer is probably at least a decade away. The rush to adopt encryption algorithms that can withstand the onslaught of a qubit attack has already begun, with European countries feeling variable levels of urgency. "Sooner is better in principle," an analyst said.

Hasn't released it to the public, because it would break the internet - in a bad way For years, the infosec community’s biggest existential worry has been quantum computers blowing away all classical encryption and revealing the world’s secrets. Now they have a new Big Bad: an AI model that can generate zero-day vulnerabilities.…

Bank Info Security 3 months, 2 weeks ago

How Companies Should Confront Q-Day

Dell's John Roese on Quantum Readiness, Cryptographic Inventory and Sovereign AIQuantum computing poses an existential threat to encryption systems built on asymmetric key management protocols, and most enterprises don't know where their cryptographic exposure begins. Dell Technologies' John Roese explains what to do now.

Bank Info Security 3 months, 3 weeks ago

Google's 2029 Quantum Deadline Is a Wake-Up Call

Google's Accelerated PQC Timeline Demands Enterprise Action NowGoogle set a public deadline for migrating to post-quantum cryptography, setting a strong signal for IT and security leaders that they too should transition their encryption into more robust algorithms. Enterprises need a migration strategy now before the window closes.

Bank Info Security 3 months, 3 weeks ago

How Quantum Threats Drive Encryption Changes

Alex Doll of Ten Eleven Ventures on Q-Day Risk ConsiderationsQuantum computing advances push security teams to replace encryption keys faster and adopt quantum-resistant algorithms. Investors and enterprises now treat Q-Day as a near-term risk, forcing changes in key management, PKI and cryptographic standards, says Alex Doll of Ten Eleven Ventures.

Old Playbook, New Scale: While defenders are chasing trends, attackers are optimizing the basics The security industry loves talking about "new" threats. AI-powered attacks. Quantum-resistant encryption. Zero-trust architectures. But looking around, it seems like the most effective attacks in 2025 are pretty much the same as they were in 2015. Attackers are exploiting the same entry points that

Quantum computing and AI working together will bring incredible opportunities. Together, the technologies will help us extend innovation further and faster than ever before. But, imagine the flip side, waking up to news that hackers have used a quantum computer to crack your company's encryption overnight, exposing your most sensitive data, rendering much of it untrustworthy

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