AI is speeding up the quantum threat to crypto, security experts warn
Researchers and builders believe that artificial intelligence may be accelerating the quantum timeline and forcing a broader rethink of how digital security works.
Editorial perspective
AI-assisted
Cryptographic security underpins virtually every financial transaction, from blockchain networks to traditional banking infrastructure. The conventional wisdom held that quantum computers powerful enough to break current encryption standards remained decades away. However, security researchers now suggest AI-driven optimization could dramatically compress this timeline, creating urgent implications for corporate treasuries, payment processors, and cryptocurrency protocols.
The concern centers on post-quantum cryptography—systems designed to resist both classical and quantum attacks. Financial institutions have treated migration to quantum-resistant standards as a long-term priority, but if AI accelerates quantum capabilities, the transition window narrows considerably. For cryptocurrency markets, where immutable ledgers cannot be retroactively secured, the stakes are particularly high. Billions in digital assets could face exposure if quantum-AI convergence outpaces defensive measures.
This development signals that cybersecurity spending may need to accelerate across financial services, with potential material impacts on technology budgets and vendor selection. Boards should expect heightened scrutiny of cryptographic resilience in risk assessments.
Originally reported by Margaux Nijkerk
for CoinDesk
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Editorial perspective
AI-assistedCryptographic security underpins virtually every financial transaction, from blockchain networks to traditional banking infrastructure. The conventional wisdom held that quantum computers powerful enough to break current encryption standards remained decades away. However, security researchers now suggest AI-driven optimization could dramatically compress this timeline, creating urgent implications for corporate treasuries, payment processors, and cryptocurrency protocols.
The concern centers on post-quantum cryptography—systems designed to resist both classical and quantum attacks. Financial institutions have treated migration to quantum-resistant standards as a long-term priority, but if AI accelerates quantum capabilities, the transition window narrows considerably. For cryptocurrency markets, where immutable ledgers cannot be retroactively secured, the stakes are particularly high. Billions in digital assets could face exposure if quantum-AI convergence outpaces defensive measures.
This development signals that cybersecurity spending may need to accelerate across financial services, with potential material impacts on technology budgets and vendor selection. Boards should expect heightened scrutiny of cryptographic resilience in risk assessments.