Although quantum computers aren’t yet overcoming encryption at scale, that doesn’t mean the IoT sector can afford to wait.
By Leo Marchandon PARIS, June 16 (Reuters) - France's cybersecurity agency ANSSI said on Tuesday it would stop certifying security products that lack quantum-resistant encryption, a move that will ...
This isn’t the first time that the government has tried to impose export controls to keep high-risk software out of the wrong ...
Quantum computing advances raise concerns over 10,000 qubits breaking P‑256 encryption using Shor’s algorithm, driving ...
Quantum computing will eventually make its way into cybercrime as well, but the cybersecurity industry is preparing for when ...
Artificial intelligence may dominate headlines, but retired Army Lt. Gen. Ross Coffman believes another technological shift ...
Quantum computers are closer than ever. The year 2026 has been internationally designated the "Year of Quantum Security" -- ...
Quantum exposure cuts across data, supplier contracts, capital allocation, customer commitments, regulatory adequacy and ...
ClickFix attacks are delivering BabaDeda, Lorem Ipsum, and Potemkin loaders to deploy stealers, RATs, and ransomware-linked ...
Most legal technology shifts do not announce themselves with trumpets. They slip into ordinary practice first. Email was once ...
MicroAlgo Inc. (the "Company" or "MicroAlgo") (NASDAQ: MLGO), today announced the development of an innovative high-precision, high-throughput reconfigurable simulation technology, aimed at providing ...
Quantum computers could expose our digital secrets – but there are much better reasons to build them
Digital secrets are protected by encryption, which converts meaningful data into an unintelligible form. If quantum computers could unscramble current encryption, they could expose highly sensitive ...
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