Quantum-safe cryptography: Securing today’s data against tomorrow’s computers webinar

This post has been republished via RSS; it originally appeared at: Microsoft Research.

As the world prepares for the advent of the quantum computer, the security community must also prepare to defend against it. Most of the cryptography currently in use succumbs to quantum attacks. Although quantum computers are still a decade or so away from becoming a reality, existing communications are already at risk: Encrypted data can be recorded today and decrypted with the help of a quantum computer in the future.

In this webinar, Principal Program Manager Christian Paquin, a cryptography specialist in the Security and Cryptography group at Microsoft Research, will present recent progress in the development of a quantum-safe cryptography. Quantum-safe cryptography is being developed using mathematical problems believed to be more difficult for a quantum computer to solve than such existing methods as factoring and discrete logarithms. Paquin will discuss quantum-safe cryptography’s standardization by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, its implementation in the Open Quantum Safe project, and results from recent experiments integrating it into the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol, the Secure Shell (SSH) protocol, and virtual private networks (VPNs).

Together, you’ll explore:

  • The impact of quantum computers on today’s widely used cryptography
  • New types of quantum-resistant problems being proposed
  • The results of experiments integrating quantum-safe cryptography into TLS, SSH, and VPNs and the benefits of such experiments in helping to prepare for the transition to post-quantum cryptography
  • The benefit of a hybrid of classical and quantum-safe schemes in early migrations

In addition to his involvement in projects related to post-quantum cryptography, Principal Program Manager Christian Paquin is also leading the development of the privacy-preserving U-Prove technology. In a career that spans 20-plus years, he’s worked on identity and access management, privacy-enhancing technologies, smart cloud encryption, including searchable and homomorphic encryption, and AI security. Prior to joining Microsoft in 2008, Paquin was the chief security engineer at Credentica; a crypto developer working on digital signature systems at Silanis Technology; and a security engineer working on Tor-like systems at Zero-Knowledge Systems.

The post Quantum-safe cryptography: Securing today’s data against tomorrow’s computers webinar appeared first on Microsoft Research.

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