Guest Post by American News Group.
Every technological revolution arrives with a shadow. Electricity brought the electrocution hazard and, eventually, the entire safety industry built to contain it. The automobile brought the traffic fatality, and with it seatbelts, airbags, and a century of regulation. The internet brought the data breach, and an entire cybersecurity economy now worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year. Quantum computing — the technology that governments and the world’s largest companies are pouring billions into — is about to cast the largest shadow yet. And the industry forming in that shadow may turn out to be one of the defining investment themes of the coming decade.
The reason is deceptively simple. Almost every secret the digital world keeps — bank transfers, medical records, state communications, the login credentials behind critical infrastructure — is protected by encryption math that a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could, in principle, unravel. The same machines being celebrated as a scientific triumph are also a skeleton key for the encrypted world. As those machines move from the laboratory toward practical capability, a quiet, urgent question has moved to the center of boardrooms and government agencies alike: who is going to protect the world’s data before the machines catch up?










