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Are we ready for a post-quantum world?

PCQuest

|

March 2025

Quantum computing is both a breakthrough and a ticking time bomb for encryption. As hackers prepare to decrypt today's secrets tomorrow, businesses must embrace quantum-resistant cryptography now. The race isn't just to innovate—it's to secure the future before it's too late

- Ashok Pandey

Are we ready for a post-quantum world?

Quantum computing is poised to revolutionize technology, but it also presents a major threat to modern cryptographic security. Current encryption methods, such as RSA and ECC, rely on the complexity of mathematical problems that classical computers cannot solve efficiently. However, quantum computers, powered by algorithms like Shor's Algorithm, have the potential to break these cryptographic standards. This has led to an urgent global effort to develop quantum-resistant cryptography.

The question is: how soon will quantum computing become a real threat, and what can businesses do to protect their data?

The Threat of Quantum Computing to Cryptography

1. Why Traditional Encryption is at Risk

Most secure communications today rely on public-key cryptography, including:

  • RSA (Rivest-Shamir-Adleman) – Secures everything from emails to financial transactions.

  • ECC (Elliptic Curve Cryptography) – Used in mobile security and blockchain applications.

These cryptosystems depend on the difficulty of factoring large numbers or solving discrete logarithms. While classical computers struggle with these problems, quantum computers can solve them exponentially faster using Shor's Algorithm. Once quantum computing reaches a scalable level, current encryption will be rendered obsolete.

2. The Reality of Quantum Computing Today

Although quantum computing is not yet mainstream due to cost and technical limitations, experts predict that scalable quantum machines could become viable within the next 10–15 years. However, the risk is already present today with the concept of “harvest now, decrypt later” attacks, where adversaries collect encrypted data now, intending to decrypt it once quantum computers are available.

Preparing for the Post-Quantum Era

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