When Encryption Breaks: The Quantum Threat You Can’t Ignore

When Encryption Breaks: The Quantum Threat You Can’t Ignore

Quantum encryption risk is the future cybersecurity risk created when quantum computing becomes powerful enough to weaken widely used public-key cryptography such as RSA, Elliptic Curve Cryptography and Diffie-Hellman. For enterprises, this creates a long-term confidentiality, identity, cloud security, compliance and governance challenge because sensitive encrypted data collected today may be decrypted in the future.

Executive Summary

Quantum computing is advancing toward capabilities that could significantly affect modern cryptography.

Many widely deployed public-key cryptographic algorithms, including RSA, Elliptic Curve Cryptography and Diffie-Hellman, may become vulnerable to sufficiently powerful quantum computers.

Large-scale quantum attacks are not currently practical. However, organizations should prepare for the emerging risk of Harvest Now, Decrypt Later attacks. In this scenario, encrypted data is collected today and decrypted in the future when quantum computing capabilities become stronger.

To maintain long-term confidentiality, integrity and trust in digital systems, enterprises should begin assessing cryptographic exposure, building crypto-agility strategies and planning migration toward Post-Quantum Cryptography.

The Problem: Quantum Computing Creates Future Cryptographic Risk

Modern digital security relies on cryptographic algorithms such as:

  • RSA
  • Elliptic Curve Cryptography
  • Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange
  • Digital certificates
  • Public Key Infrastructure
  • Secure key exchange mechanisms

These technologies protect critical systems such as:

  • Online banking
  • VPNs
  • Cloud services
  • Digital certificates
  • Secure communications
  • Identity and Access Management systems
  • Zero Trust architectures
  • API authentication
  • Signed software and documents

As quantum computing advances, some widely used cryptographic methods may become vulnerable. This creates a long-term security risk for organizations that must protect sensitive data for many years.

Why Quantum Risk Matters

The impact of compromised encryption extends beyond data confidentiality.

Potential consequences include:

  • Exposure of sensitive customer and employee information
  • Compromise of financial transactions and business records
  • Loss of trust in digital signatures
  • Weakening of certificate-based authentication
  • Increased attack surface across cloud and hybrid environments
  • Long-term exposure of regulated data
  • Risks to identity security and IAM systems
  • Weakness in Zero Trust implementations
  • Increased compliance and audit pressure

Organizations with long data-retention requirements face higher exposure. This includes financial institutions, healthcare providers, government agencies, regulated enterprises and critical infrastructure operators.

Harvest Now, Decrypt Later

Harvest Now, Decrypt Later is one of the most important quantum-related risks.

In this attack model, adversaries collect encrypted data today and store it for future decryption. The data may be unreadable now, but it could become exposed later if quantum computing breaks the cryptographic protections used to secure it.

This matters because some data has long-term value, including:

  • Financial records
  • Health records
  • Legal documents
  • Government data
  • Customer identity information
  • Intellectual property
  • Trade secrets
  • Authentication records
  • Sensitive business communications

If the data must remain confidential for years, organizations should assess whether current cryptographic controls are strong enough for future threats.

Technical Explanation

Today’s encryption standards are designed to withstand attacks from classical computers.

Quantum computers use a fundamentally different approach to computation. This could allow them to solve certain mathematical problems much more efficiently than classical systems.

This creates concern for public-key cryptographic systems such as RSA, Elliptic Curve Cryptography and Diffie-Hellman.

To address this risk, organizations are beginning to prepare for Post-Quantum Cryptography. PQC refers to cryptographic algorithms designed to remain secure against both classical and quantum attacks.

NIST has finalized its first set of Post-Quantum Cryptography standards, including FIPS 203, FIPS 204 and FIPS 205. These standards give organizations a stronger foundation for future cryptographic migration planning.

Enterprise Security Implications

Quantum readiness affects multiple cybersecurity domains.

Identity and Access Management

Many authentication systems rely on cryptographic trust models.

Digital certificates, signing keys, authentication tokens, federation systems and secure session establishment may eventually require modernization.

Identity teams should evaluate:

  • Certificate dependencies
  • Token signing mechanisms
  • Federation trust models
  • IAM cryptographic dependencies
  • Zero Trust architecture dependencies
  • Privileged access systems
  • Long-term identity assurance risks
Cloud Security and CSPM

Cloud environments contain large volumes of encrypted data and certificate-dependent services.

Organizations should evaluate cryptographic dependencies across:

  • Cloud workloads
  • Cloud key management systems
  • Data storage services
  • API gateways
  • TLS certificates
  • Cloud-native identity services
  • Third-party integrations
  • Backup and archive systems
  • Cloud Security Posture Management programs

Cloud governance should include cryptographic inventory and crypto-agility planning.

SOC Operations and Threat Detection

Security Operations Centers should incorporate quantum-related risk into long-term cyber resilience planning.

SOC and detection teams should consider:

  • Threat modeling
  • Security risk assessments
  • Security architecture reviews
  • Detection engineering roadmaps
  • Long-term incident response planning
  • Security telemetry strategy
  • Asset visibility
  • Cryptographic control monitoring
  • Attack surface exposure

Quantum risk may not produce traditional alerts today. However, the underlying asset, certificate, encryption and key management exposure should be visible in risk and governance workflows.

Security Telemetry and Asset Visibility

Security teams should maintain inventories of cryptographic assets.

This includes:

  • Cryptographic algorithms
  • Certificates
  • Encryption protocols
  • Key management systems
  • PKI infrastructure
  • TLS configurations
  • Signing keys
  • Data stores with long-term confidentiality needs
  • Applications using RSA, ECC or Diffie-Hellman
  • Third-party systems with cryptographic dependencies

Security telemetry, asset visibility and governance records are essential for identifying systems that may require future migration to quantum-resistant controls.

Compliance Impact

Quantum risk is also a governance and compliance issue.

Relevant compliance considerations include:

  • ISO 27001 risk management
  • GDPR security and personal data protection
  • India DPDP Act safeguards for personal data
  • DORA operational resilience
  • NIS2 cybersecurity risk management
  • CIS Controls security hygiene
  • NIST Post-Quantum Cryptography guidance
  • Audit evidence for cryptographic risk decisions
  • Data retention and confidentiality obligations

Organizations should treat cryptographic resilience as part of enterprise risk management, not only as a technical encryption issue.

Compliance Impact

Post-Quantum Cryptography helps organizations prepare for cryptographic threats created by quantum computing.

However, migration is not only about replacing one algorithm with another.

Organizations need crypto-agility.

Crypto-agility means the ability to identify, replace, rotate and upgrade cryptographic algorithms, keys, certificates and protocols without disrupting business operations.

A crypto-agility strategy should include:

  • Cryptographic asset inventory
  • Certificate inventory
  • Key management review
  • Data sensitivity assessment
  • Long-term retention analysis
  • Application dependency mapping
  • Cloud cryptographic dependency review
  • Vendor and third-party cryptography review
  • Migration roadmap
  • Governance ownership
  • Audit evidence

Without crypto-agility, organizations may struggle to respond when algorithms become deprecated, vulnerable or non-compliant.

Example Use Case: Financial Services Organization

A financial institution encrypts customer transaction records using RSA-based cryptographic controls.

An adversary captures encrypted communications and archives the data.

Years later, quantum computing capabilities become sufficient to weaken the cryptographic protections.

Potential exposure may include:

  • Customer identities
  • Account information
  • Historical financial transactions
  • Sensitive business records
  • Regulatory data
  • Long-retention compliance records

To reduce future exposure, the institution should establish a cryptographic inventory, assess long-term data sensitivity and develop a phased Post-Quantum Cryptography migration strategy.

This should include security, legal, compliance, cloud, identity and architecture teams.

Quantum Readiness Checklist

Organizations should use this checklist to prepare for quantum-era cryptographic risk:

  • Inventory cryptographic assets and systems using RSA, ECC or Diffie-Hellman
  • Identify sensitive data that requires long-term protection
  • Review certificate and PKI dependencies
  • Assess cloud key management and encryption services
  • Review IAM and Zero Trust cryptographic dependencies
  • Identify systems supporting regulated personal data
  • Develop a crypto-agility strategy
  • Plan Post-Quantum Cryptography migration
  • Update risk registers and security policies
  • Map quantum readiness to ISO 27001, GDPR, DPDP, NIS2, DORA and CIS Controls
  • Maintain audit evidence for cryptographic risk decisions
  • Include third-party and vendor cryptography in assessments
  • Track remediation and migration ownership
  • Review cryptographic exposure regularly

How ServQual and SUSAN Support Quantum Readiness

SUSAN, ServQual’s AI driven cybersecurity, privacy and GRC platform, helps enterprises stay audit-ready, manage risk proactively and align cybersecurity, compliance and privacy in one unified platform.

SUSAN supports quantum readiness by helping organizations connect emerging cryptographic risk with governance, risk, compliance, audit evidence and security visibility.

SUSAN can support:

  • Risk assessment and tracking
  • Governance, Risk and Compliance workflows
  • Policy and control management
  • Audit evidence management
  • Compliance monitoring and reporting
  • Cloud and SOC validation workflows
  • Regulatory coverage visibility
  • Risk ownership tracking
  • Continuous assurance
  • Leadership-level risk visibility

By connecting leadership, engineering, security, compliance and audit teams, SUSAN helps organizations prepare for emerging risks such as quantum computing and cryptographic resilience.

Picture of Dara Sturgeon

Dara Sturgeon

Security Success Manager | ServQual

FAQ

Most frequent questions and answers

Current quantum computers are not yet capable of breaking modern enterprise encryption at practical scale. However, organizations should prepare because cryptographic migration can take years.

Public-key algorithms such as RSA, Elliptic Curve Cryptography and Diffie-Hellman are considered the most exposed to future quantum computing advances.

Harvest Now, Decrypt Later is a threat model where attackers collect encrypted data today and attempt to decrypt it in the future when quantum computing capabilities become more advanced.

Post-Quantum Cryptography refers to cryptographic algorithms designed to remain secure against both classical and quantum computers.

Organizations should prepare now because cryptographic discovery, vendor review, application dependency mapping, key management updates and migration planning can take years.

Crypto-agility is the ability to identify, replace, rotate and upgrade cryptographic algorithms, certificates, keys and protocols without major disruption to business operations.

SUSAN helps organizations connect quantum-related cryptographic risk with risk assessment, governance workflows, compliance monitoring, audit evidence, control ownership and continuous assurance.

Quantum risk is not only a future technology issue. It is a governance, security, compliance and resilience issue that organizations should prepare for now.

As quantum computing develops, enterprises should identify cryptographic dependencies, understand long-term data exposure and build a migration path toward crypto-agility and Post-Quantum Cryptography readiness.

Explore SUSAN, ServQual’s AI driven cybersecurity, privacy and GRC platform, or contact ServQual to discuss how your organization can improve risk visibility, compliance readiness and cryptographic resilience.

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