Nation-state adversaries are intercepting and storing your encrypted network traffic right now. They can't read it yet. They're waiting for quantum computers — which current estimates put at 2030 to 2035 — to break the encryption retroactively. This attack is called Harvest Now, Decrypt Later (HNDL), and it makes the quantum computing threat an active security problem today, not a future one.
Topics covered:
- What HNDL is and why it means your 2026 encrypted data is already at risk
- Why RSA and elliptic curve cryptography break completely under Shor's algorithm
- What TAI Creative found when we ran a full quantum penetration test against our own production infrastructure (api.qkyon.com, getkyon.com, taicreative.co)
- NIST's finalized post-quantum cryptography standards: FIPS 203 (ML-KEM), 204 (ML-DSA), 205 (SLH-DSA) — and what they replace
- Which industries face the earliest HNDL exposure: finance, healthcare, defense contractors
- What a realistic PQC migration timeline looks like for a mid-size organization
Produced by TAI Creative — building Kyon, the first conversational quantum computing platform for business optimization.
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