The Quantum Almanac 2026–2027: Signal Over Noise on Quantum Risk to Data Security, authored by J. Nathaniel Ader, was released on March 4, 2026. The publication explores how emerging quantum ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. It'll still be a while before quantum computers become powerful enough to do anything useful, but it's increasingly likely that we ...
Scientific guidance meant to ensure the U.S. is ready to shore up cyber defenses against a potential quantum computers’ ability to break through modern encryption methods are set for release the week ...
Bain & Company today announced it will work with IBM to deliver expertise to private equity and corporate clients on post-quantum cryptography risks and strategic mitigations. The strategic ...
The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology today released its Federal Information Process Standards for post-quantum cryptography, a new set of standards that ...
To safeguard existing cybersecurity protocols from easy decryption by a quantum computer, the National Institute of Standards and Technology Post-Quantum Cryptography Project has developed three ...
After eight years, the National Institutes for Standards and Technology (NIST) has finally released recommended encryption tools to replace public-key encryption, providing the much-needed guidance ...
Healthcare organizations rely on cryptography-based security, but the infrastructure faces radical change with the rise of quantum computing. A panel of experts at HIMSS26 will explore what's needed ...
Quantum-resilient cryptography took a step forward this week with the launch of the FHE Technical Consortium for Hardware (FHETCH), a group focused on interoperability between fully homomorphic ...
The discovery and exploitation of quantum mechanics will inevitably be noted as a pivotal milestone, setting the stage for the advent of quantum computing—a field that has the potential to redefine ...
It’ll still be a while before quantum computers become powerful enough to do anything useful, but it’s increasingly likely that we will see full-scale, error-corrected quantum computers become ...