Quantum Bridge’s new funding round is a market signal, but the technical story is sharper: investors are backing the machinery that moves and protects keys, not a magic “quantum-proof” cipher.
The debate over “Q-Day” is less about a dramatic calendar moment than about whether banks, public services, and hospitals can replace quantum-vulnerable cryptography before long-lived data becomes a liability.
Patero and Orilla have introduced a platform aimed at securing industrial AI workloads and communications as edge systems take on more of the operational burden.
In a post-quantum security context, polymorphic malware adds another layer of defensive complexity, pushing defenders to look beyond cryptographic theory and into implementation, identity, and operational control.
As quantum computing threatens to crack today’s encryption, industrial systems face a critical race to adapt-or risk catastrophic breaches.
As quantum threats loom, organizations scramble to reinvent cryptographic defenses before the clock strikes zero.