Company News
AI risk, post-quantum cryptography, and enterprise security updates
Quantum Batteries: Real Breakthrough, Real Promise, and What Lithium-Ion Can’t Easily Do
Most battery headlines are really about chemistry. A little more range. A little more safety. A little less cost. This one is different.
Read moreQuantum-Safe Video Encryption Just Took a Step Forward — But the Real Enterprise Story Is Bigger
A new research effort highlighted by Live Science points to something important: cybersecurity teams are starting to think about quantum risk in a much more practical way. Instead of talking only about abstract “Q-Day” scenarios, researchers are building protections for specific data types and real workflows. In this case, the focus is video. The FIU-led work, published in IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics and publicized in March 2026, describes a hybrid encryption framework for video data that is intended to defend against both current attacks and future quantum-enabled threats.
Read moreMythos Is Not Just a Better Model. It Signals a Fundamental Change in AI.
Anthropic’s decision to withhold Claude Mythos Preview from broad public release should be treated as a major signal, not just another model launch headline. The company says Mythos has already found thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities, including in every major operating system and every major web browser, and it created Project Glasswing to put the model in the hands of a limited set of defensive partners instead of releasing it openly. Anthropic’s own framing is that AI has now reached a level where models can surpass all but the most skilled humans at finding and exploiting software vulnerabilities.
Read moreAI May Be Pulling Q-Day Closer: Why the Quantum Threat Timeline Is No Longer Just About Better Qubits
The newest wake-up call in quantum security is not just that quantum computing keeps improving. It is that artificial intelligence is now helping improve it too. TIME reported on April 7, 2026 that researchers behind new work tied to Oratomic said AI was “instrumental” in developing parts of their algorithmic breakthrough, and that the system combined prior results in novel ways the team might not have found on its own. At the same time, Google, Cloudflare, and NIST are all sending the same broader message: the world should be moving faster on post-quantum migration, not slower.
Read moreA New Quantum Experiment Just Showed Something Wild: Tiny Atoms Can Act Like They Are Secretly Connected And why that matters for the future of quantum networking
Most of us grow up thinking the world works like this: if two things are far apart, they should behave separately. Quantum physics keeps telling us that the universe is stranger than that.
Read moreCloudflare Just Sent the Same Signal Google Sent: 2029 Is Becoming the Post-Quantum Date Enterprises Need to Take Seriously
For years, many leaders treated post-quantum cryptography as a future issue. Important, yes. Urgent, not yet. That is getting harder to defend.
Read moreSam Altman’s “Superintelligence New Deal”: What It Actually Is, and Why It Matters
Most people hearing about Sam Altman’s so-called “superintelligence New Deal” might assume it is a flashy media slogan. In reality, it comes from a real OpenAI policy paper published in April 2026: Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age: Ideas to Keep People First. And the reason it is getting so much attention is simple: one of the world’s most influential AI companies is now openly arguing that incremental policy tweaks will not be enough if AI continues advancing toward superintelligence.
Read moreQuantum Networking Won’t Replace the Monolith. It Will Help Finish the Job.
For years, the quantum industry has framed scale as a race to build a bigger single processor.
Read moreIBM’s Latest Quantum Breakthrough Is Not About More Qubits. It’s About Making Them Behave.
For years, most quantum headlines have trained people to look for one number: qubit count.
Read moreNaoris’ Post-Quantum Blockchain Launch Is Bigger Than Crypto News — It’s a Warning Shot for Every Digital System
For years, most people treated the quantum threat like a distant science project. Interesting. Important. But not urgent. That posture is getting harder to defend.
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