Trump Order Sets 2030 Deadline for Federal Post-Quantum Crypto Migration
President Trump signed an executive order on June 22 setting hard deadlines for federal agencies to move high-value assets and high-impact systems to post-quantum cryptography
Presidential decisions shape national cybersecurity policy, critical-infrastructure protection, cyber incident response, and intelligence oversight.
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President is the elected or appointed head of a country, government, or organization. In security news, the tag usually concerns the individual, the office, or the systems and staff supporting them, rather than a specific technology.
The role matters in information security because presidential accounts, devices, schedules, contacts, and communications can attract targeted phishing, account takeover, surveillance, and impersonation attempts. Executive assistants, personal email, mobile devices, social-media accounts, and public-facing websites are important attack surfaces. Appropriate controls include phishing-resistant multifactor authentication, hardened and managed devices, strict separation of personal and official communications, careful access delegation, and privacy protections for sensitive travel or family information. Threat intelligence can help identify campaigns aimed at the office, while vulnerability management should cover its internet-facing systems. Prepared incident-response procedures are particularly important because compromise may require rapid credential revocation, trusted public communication, preservation of evidence, and coordination with relevant government or organizational authorities.
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President Trump signed an executive order on June 22 setting hard deadlines for federal agencies to move high-value assets and high-impact systems to post-quantum cryptography