According to the latest Google research, it could take as few as 1,200 logical qubits for a quantum computer to break ...
Bitcoin and several other cryptocurrencies use an implementation of ECC called secp256k1. According to Google, its ...
According to a study by engineers at Caltech and the UC Department of Physics, quantum computers do not need to be nearly as ...
Building a utility-scale quantum computer that can crack one of the most vital cryptosystems—elliptic curves—doesn’t require ...
New research suggests that a quantum computer could crack a crucial cryptography method with just 10,000 qubits.
At the same time, a March 2026 preprint from a Caltech–Berkeley–Oratomic collaboration explores what might be possible using ...
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 ...
​For much of the past decade, post-quantum cryptography (PQC) lived primarily in academic journals and standards committees.
Research suggests fault-tolerant quantum machines could arrive sooner than expected, posing a threat to Bitcoin and Ethereum cryptography.
Though Cloudflare already enabled post-quantum encryption for all websites and application programming interfaces (APIs) in ...
The quantum-safe cryptography landscape in 2026 spans PQC vendors, QKD providers, cloud platforms, and consultancies responding to the growing quantum threat. Organizations are adopting a dual ...