Quantum computers powerful enough to break widely used public-key encryption aren’t here yet, but migration won’t be as simple as swapping in a new tool.
Tom Mangan is an experienced freelance B2B technology writer specializing in artificial intelligence, cloud services, cybersecurity, modernization and more. See more of his work at tommangan.net.
The day when a quantum computer can crack commonly used forms of encryption is drawing closer. The world isn’t prepared, ...
Protect your AI agent workflows from quantum threats. Learn how to implement quantum-resistant cryptography for Model Context Protocol (MCP) deployments today.
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The quantum cryptography market hits $2.93B in 2025, racing to $33.15B by 2034 at 35.3% CAGR as quantum threats force a global security overhaul. “Quantum computing is no longer a distant threat.
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For many business leaders, quantum computing feels like science fiction—a technology that’s exciting, but distant. That’s a mistake. While we have yet to engineer quantum computing at even a remotely ...
Less than a year ago, NIST released its first set of Post Quantum Cryptography (PQC) standards. The call then went out from quantum cryptography experts for federal agencies to immediately start ...
Join Elektor and NXP for a technical webinar on how post-quantum cryptography is moving from research and standardisation ...
Quantum computing is advancing faster than expected, forcing Bitcoin and the broader crypto industry to prepare for a ...