Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (Cyborg)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Brand Logo

CIRCLE WITH A DOT

  1. Home
  2. Uncategorized
  3. Quantum computers threaten to break most modern cryptography within minutes — perhaps seconds.

Quantum computers threaten to break most modern cryptography within minutes — perhaps seconds.

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Uncategorized
quantumcomputincryptographypostquantumnistcybersecurity
1 Posts 1 Posters 0 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • newsgroup@social.vir.groupN This user is from outside of this forum
    newsgroup@social.vir.groupN This user is from outside of this forum
    newsgroup@social.vir.group
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Quantum computers threaten to break most modern cryptography within minutes — perhaps seconds. The theoretical threat is becoming practical reality.

    What stands to be compromised:

    Financial systems and transactions

    Government communications and classified information

    Medical records and health data

    Corporate trade secrets and intellectual property

    Personal communications and private messages

    The "harvest now, decrypt later" strategy is already in use. State actors are collecting encrypted data today, anticipating future quantum decryption capabilities.

    NIST's post-quantum cryptography competition has identified promising algorithms across several approaches: lattice-based, code-based, multivariate, and hash-based cryptography. Each presents trade-offs in performance, key size, and implementation complexity.

    The transition will cost billions globally. The geopolitical stakes are immense: the nation that achieves practical quantum computing first gains unprecedented strategic advantage — the ability to decrypt adversaries' communications, access protected state secrets, and undermine financial systems.

    This is a quantum arms race. The winner may effectively read the digital world's thoughts.
    https://newsgroup.site/quantum-computing-cryptography-threat-encryption-2026/
    #QuantumComputing #Cryptography #PostQuantum #NIST #CyberSecurity #DataPrivacy

    Link Preview Image
    1 Reply Last reply
    2
    0
    • R relay@relay.publicsquare.global shared this topic
      R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes


    • Login

    • Login or register to search.
    • First post
      Last post
    0
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • World
    • Users
    • Groups