Speakers at the 10th ETSI/IQC Quantum Safe Cryptography Conference have called on organizations to prepare their cybersecurity infrastructures to address the challenges of a post-quantum world.

Organized by ETSI and the Institute for Quantum Computing, this year’s conference was hosted from 14-16 May by the Center for Quantum Technologies (CQT), National University of Singapore (NUS), in partnership with the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) and the Cyber Security Agency (CSA) of Singapore. The event attracted an impressive 235 onsite delegates from 27 countries, reflecting fast-growing interest worldwide in the critical importance of quantum-safe cryptography in cybersecurity strategies.

quantum threats and risk management

Addressing business, industry, government, and research communities with a stake in cryptographic standardization, the three-day event provided a platform for knowledge exchange and collaboration as organizations transition their cyber infrastructures and business practices to ensure security in the imminent quantum era.

The three-day event provided a forum for facts talk and union as organizations

The executive track on the conference’s opening day (14 May) outlined the current state of quantum threats and quantum risk management. Delegates were welcomed by Chuen Hong Lew, Chief Executive of the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) of Singapore, who stressed the importance of harnessing the opportunities of quantum computing for the greater good, while ensuring that the digital infrastructure remains secure and quantum-safe.

Worldwide practical deployments

Other keynote speeches by Artur Ekert, Professorial Fellow in Quantum Physics and Cryptography at the University of Oxford and the National University of Singapore, and Michele Mosca, co-founder and Professor of the Institute for Quantum Computing at the University of Waterloo and Program Committee Chair for the conference, explored how quantum computers are poised to disrupt the current technology landscape. Panel discussions – including a dedicated session on the financial sector’s specific requirements – explored approaches being taken by businesses and governments to manage the quantum risk to information assets, cyber systems and business continuity, now and in the future.

The conference’s technical track (15-16 May) provided a deep dive into cryptographic technologies being developed through various initiatives worldwide to ensure the security of networks and connected devices in a post-quantum era. Sessions focused on topics including current standardization initiatives and worldwide practical deployments of both post-quantum cryptography and quantum key distribution, as well as migration strategies to quantum-secure ecosystems.

The need for standardization in a post-quantum world

Advances in quantum computing pose a challenge to the vigil of many universal cryptographic algorithms

Advances in quantum computing present a major challenge to the security of many ubiquitous cryptographic algorithms. Preparation for a transition to quantum secure technologies is increasing, with a corresponding acceleration in efforts to standardize tools to mitigate quantum threats. With the availability of the first quantum-safe cryptographic standards for general use anticipated in the summer of 2024, working groups at ETSI are actively exploring how they will fit into existing protocols, applications, and public-key infrastructures.

In recent years we have seen significant progress in solving the challenges of building real quantum computers” comments ETSI Director-General Luis Jorge Romero who welcomed delegates to the first day of the conference. “When ETSI held the first QSC conference in 2013, there were no standards available for quantum-safe cryptography. Standardization provides a powerful platform to consolidate fragmented global research efforts in the development of quantum-safe algorithms and associated business practices that will protect the Internet and everyone who relies on it.”

Integrity and confidentiality of information

Quantum computers are poised to disrupt the technology landscape” states Michele Mosca, co-founder of the Institute for Quantum Computing at the University of Waterloo. “Building on ten years of continuous dialog at a global level, this week’s conference highlights the necessity for business pioneers worldwide to prepare for the quantum era by focusing on ‘resilience by design’ of their critical cyber systems, and the integrity and confidentiality of information assets.”

"The 10th ETSI/IQC Quantum-Safe Cryptography Conference has highlighted the need for global coordination and sharing on best practices as the world begins an unprecedented overhaul of the crypto foundations of our communication systems,” indicates Alexander Ling, CQT Principal Investigator, NUS. “Hosting this year's conference in Singapore has brought the world's pioneering experts on the matter to our region, and I'm really happy to see all the conversations that are starting new connections and partnerships."

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