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The security assumption underneath most modern encryption rests on mathematical hardness: factoring large integers and computing discrete logarithms take a classical computer too long to exploit in any practical timeframe.
That assumption has held for decades. A sufficiently powerful quantum computer running Shor's algorithm dissolves it, reducing classically intractable problems to polynomial-time calculations.
That pending capability is why governments are treating cryptographic migration as an immediate policy requirement, and it is what brings Quantum Secure Encryption Corp.
(CSE: QSE | OTCQB: QSEGF | FSE: VN80), a Canadian post-quantum cybersecurity company, to CYDES 2026, one of Southeast Asia's premier cybersecurity conferences.
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