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Quantum computers need just 10,000 qubits to break the most secure encryption, scientists warn
Future quantum computers will need to be less powerful than we thought to threaten the security of encrypted messages.
Today, threat actors are quietly collecting data, waiting for the day when that information can be cracked with future technology.
Morning Overview on MSN
France and Japan send first DNA-encrypted message between labs
Researchers in France and Japan have transmitted what they describe as the first DNA-encrypted message between laboratories, ...
CZ says crypto can survive quantum computing threats. Here's what Google's quantum breakthrough means for Bitcoin and ...
The latest specification integrates NIST-standardized ML-KEM and ML-DSA to help device owners safeguard sensitive data ...
Charles H. Bennett and Gilles Brassard, winners of this year’s Turing Award, spent their lives touting the advantages of the ...
D metastructures produce programmable structural colors for optical encryption, with a destruction mechanism that permanently ...
Two landmark jury verdicts against social media companies have arrived at the front of a wave of lawsuits alleging that the ...
On Wednesday, a court in LA County found Meta — the parent company of Facebook — liable in the endangerment of children on ...
Alphabet (Google) sounded a fresh alarm about the accelerating risks posed by quantum computers to the foundational security ...
The court rulings against Meta are a reminder: we just want Silicon Valley to do what is right. And that starts with ...
Google's finding that breaking bitcoin's cryptography requires 20x fewer qubits than previously estimated has triggered the ...
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