Quantum computing is widely expected to disrupt modern cryptography. Many of today’s encryption systems rely on mathematical ...
According to the latest Google research, it could take as few as 1,200 logical qubits for a quantum computer to break ...
Gmail is one of—if not the—most popular email platform in the world. But it's not the favorite for users who care about their ...
New research suggests that a quantum computer could crack a crucial cryptography method with just 10,000 qubits.
In the 1980s, Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard created a new kind of encryption that would be impregnable. By Cade Metz Cade Metz has reported on quantum technologies since the 1990s. In the ...
Morey J. Haber, Chief Security Advisor at BeyondTrust, is an identity and technical evangelist with over 25 years of IT industry experience. We often prepare for threats that are visible, and ...
This growth in illicit activity has pushed encryption to the center of debates about national security, law enforcement and ...
The day when a quantum computer manages to break common encryption, or Q-Day, is fast approaching, and the world is not close ...
Google has expanded Gmail’s end-to-end encryption to Android and iOS, allowing users to send and read encrypted emails ...
Quantum computing future explained through cryptography, optimization, and AI breakthroughs showing how quantum computing ...
In February, a research team published a new architecture showing that RSA-2048, the encryption standard underpinning most of the internet’s security, could be broken with fewer than 100,000 physical ...
Traditional encryption methods have long been vulnerable to quantum computers, but two new analyses suggest a capable enough ...