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The Future of Quantum Computers Alongside Blockchain Technology
Introduction Quantum computing is one of the most disruptive technologies on the horizon, promising to solve complex problems far beyond the capabilities of today’s classical computers. At the same time, blockchain has emerged as the backbone of decentralized finance, digital identity, and distributed systems. The intersection of these two technologies poses both exciting opportunities…
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Quantum Computers and the Cryptocurrency Market: Threat or Opportunity?
Introduction: The Quantum Shift The advent of quantum computing has triggered debates across multiple industries, with the cryptocurrency market being one of the most directly impacted. Quantum computers, unlike classical computers, leverage quantum bits (qubits) to process vast amounts of data in parallel, potentially solving problems in seconds that would take traditional systems thousands…
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Quantum-Resilient by Design: A 2026 Playbook for Migrating Critical Infrastructures to Post-Quantum Cryptography
Executive Summary 2026 is the year to move decisively from “planning” to “pilot-at-scale” on post-quantum cryptography (PQC). Core building blocks are ready: NIST finalized the first PQC standards—FIPS 203 (ML-KEM / Kyber), FIPS 204 (ML-DSA / Dilithium), and FIPS 205 (SLH-DSA / SPHINCS+) in August 2024, and selected HQC in March 2025 for an…
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Is the World Ready for Quantum Computing? Challenges in the Migration to Quantum Infrastructure
Introduction Quantum computing is no longer a distant concept confined to research labs — it is rapidly approaching practical applications that could revolutionize industries from cryptography to drug discovery. With tech giants like Google, IBM, and Microsoft investing heavily in quantum research, the question arises: Is the world ready for the massive infrastructural changes…
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Shor’s Algorithm and the Future of Cryptography: A Looming Threat to Traditional Encryption
Introduction In the realm of modern cryptography, the security of most systems hinges on the difficulty of certain mathematical problems. RSA, ECC, and DH key exchange — pillars of today’s secure communication — all rely on the computational limits of classical computers. But with the rise of quantum computing, particularly the advent of Shor’s…