S_1_09

S_1_09 — Quantum Cryptography and Post-Quantum Security

Verified (Tier 1)
Confidence: 1/5 Section: S Updated: March 10, 2026
Source Count: 0 | Weighted Score: 0 | Source Confidence: [1/5] | Primary Tier: 1–2 | Last Updated: March 10, 2026
Keywords: quantum cryptography, quantum key distribution, QKD, post-quantum cryptography, RSA, Shor's algorithm, lattice-based cryptography, BB84, quantum internet, NIST PQC, cryptographic agility, harvest now decrypt later
Category Tags: future technology, cryptography, quantum, security, computing
Cross-References: S_1_04 — Quantum Computing · ZA_2_01 — Quantum Mechanics · V_1_01 — Information Theory · S_1_06 — Internet

QUICK SUMMARY

Quantum cryptography and post-quantum cryptography address the existential threat that quantum computers pose to current encryption. The threat: large-scale quantum computers running Shor's algorithm (Peter Shor, 1994) can efficiently factor large integers and compute discrete logarithms — breaking the mathematical foundations of RSA, Diffie-Hellman, and Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC), which secure virtually all current internet communications (HTTPS, TLS, VPNs, digital signatures, banking). A sufficiently powerful quantum computer (estimated at ~4,000+ error-corrected logical qubits for 2048-bit RSA) would break these systems in hours rather than the billions of years required classically. Current quantum computing status: as of 2024, the largest quantum processors (~1,100+ physical qubits, IBM "Condor") are far from the millions of physical qubits needed to implement error-corrected Shor's algorithm on cryptographically relevant key sizes; estimates for timeline range from 10 to 30+ years, but the "harvest now, decrypt later" threat — adversaries collecting encrypted communications today to decrypt when quantum computers are available — makes the transition urgent. Quantum Key Distribution (QKD): the BB84 protocol (Bennett & Brassard, 1984) uses quantum mechanics (the no-cloning theorem, measurement disturbance) to guarantee secure key exchange — any eavesdropping attempt physically perturbs the quantum states and is detectable; QKD has been commercially deployed (ID Quantique, Toshiba) and demonstrated over satellite links (China's Micius satellite, 2017, key distribution over 1,200 km); however, QKD requires dedicated physical infrastructure (optical fiber or line-of-sight), is expensive, and cannot protect stored data or authenticate users. Post-quantum cryptography (PQC): NIST finalized its first PQC standards in August 2024 — CRYSTALS-Kyber (lattice-based key encapsulation) and CRYSTALS-Dilithium, FALCON, and SPHINCS+ (digital signature schemes) — designed to be secure against both classical and quantum computers while running on existing hardware; migration to PQC across global infrastructure is a massive, multi-year undertaking requiring cryptographic agility.


1. VERIFIED CLAIMS (Tier 1 — Peer-Reviewed / Scholarly Consensus)

1.1 Shor's Algorithm Threat

1.2 NIST PQC Standards


2. CREDIBLE CLAIMS (Tier 2 — Academic / Debated but Supported)

2.1 QKD Practicality

2.2 Harvest Now, Decrypt Later


3. SPECULATIVE CLAIMS (Tier 3 — Possible but Unverified)

3.1 Quantum Internet


4. DUBIOUS CLAIMS (Tier 4 — No Credible Source / Contradicted by Evidence)

4.1 Quantum Computers Already Breaking Encryption

Counter-Arguments


IMAGES

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BIBLIOGRAPHY


CROSS-REFERENCE INDEX

Related DocConnection
S_1_04 — Quantum ComputingQuantum threat
ZA_2_01 — Quantum MechanicsPhysics foundations
V_1_01 — Information TheoryCryptographic math
S_1_06 — InternetNetwork security
ZA_5_18Quantum key distribution protocols in detail

Last Updated: March 10, 2026


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