Post Quantum Cryptography: Readiness Challenges and the Approaching Storm
Matt Campagna, Brian LaMacchia, and David Ott

TL;DR
This paper discusses the imminent transition to post-quantum cryptography driven by quantum computing advances, highlighting the challenges, potential disruptions, and the importance of early preparation for a smooth global migration.
Contribution
It emphasizes the urgency of preparing for post-quantum cryptography transition, outlining the challenges and the broad impact on digital security infrastructure.
Findings
Quantum computing threatens current cryptography.
Transition to post-quantum cryptography is complex and widespread.
Early preparation can mitigate disruption and costs.
Abstract
While advances in quantum computing promise new opportunities for scientific advancement (e.g., material science and machine learning), many people are not aware that they also threaten the widely deployed cryptographic algorithms that are the foundation of today's digital security and privacy. From mobile communications to online banking to personal data privacy, literally billions of Internet users rely on cryptography every day to ensure that private communications and data stay private. Indeed, the emergence and growth of the public Internet and electronic commerce was arguably enabled by the invention of public-key cryptography. The key advantage offered by public-key cryptography is that it allows two parties who have never communicated previously to nevertheless establish a secure, private, communication channel over a non-private network (e.g., the Internet). Recent advances…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Blockchain Technology Applications and Security
