Security news aggregator

Latest coverage for Quantum

Quantum computing could undermine widely used public-key encryption, driving research into quantum-resistant algorithms and secure migration planning.

4 headlines in this view

Refine the feed

Search across headline titles and summaries.

Tag briefing

Background for this topic.

Quantum computing uses quantum-mechanical effects in qubits to solve some problems differently from conventional computers. In information security, its significance is primarily cryptographic: a sufficiently capable, fault-tolerant quantum computer could use Shor’s algorithm to break RSA and elliptic-curve cryptography, which protect certificates, key exchanges, signatures, and encrypted archives. Quantum computing is not expected to break all cryptography equally; symmetric encryption and cryptographic hashes generally require larger security parameters rather than replacement for the same reason.

The practical concern is “harvest now, decrypt later”: adversaries can collect encrypted traffic today for future decryption, especially when data must remain confidential for years. Organizations should inventory public-key algorithms and long-lived sensitive data, assess dependencies such as certificates and protocols, and plan migration to standardized post-quantum cryptography with crypto-agile systems. Quantum key distribution is a separate, specialized communications approach; it does not replace endpoint security, authentication, or conventional key-management controls and has significant deployment constraints.

Showing 4 most recent headlines Filtered view
Bank Info Security 1 year, 2 months ago

Prepare to Start Implementing Quantum-Safe Algorithms

ISC2 CISO Jon France on Why Quantum Resilience Falls Squarely Under the CISOQuantum computing is at a tipping point, moving from theoretical math to deployable physics, said Jon France, CISO at ISC2. So, security teams need to start addressing the implementation of quantum-safe algorithms now, beginning with the five new safe algorithms released by NIST.

Bank Info Security 1 year, 2 months ago

Cryptocurrency Found Lacking at RSAC Cryptographers' Panel

Hot Topics Also Include Quantum Computing, Blockchains, Artificial IntelligenceCryptocurrencies have dramatically failed to live up to their promise, to the extent that the "world would be better" without them, said cryptographer Adi Shamir at this year's RSAC Conference, during an expert panel that touched on artificial intelligence, quantum computing, blockchains and more.