Every time you pay online, your data is protected by a maths problem nobody has proved is unbreakable. Here is what that means, and why the world is already preparing for the worst.
Every time you send a text, pay for groceries with your phone, or use your health site, you are relying on encryption.
DNA strands on tiny beads hide and reveal encrypted messages through programmable fluorescence patterns read by flow cytometry.
Your phone's encryption is about to become obsolete. Samsung just future-proofed it. The Exynos 2600, announced December 19, 2025, is the world's first ...
Today, PKC forms the foundation for e-commerce, allowing more than US$1 trillion per day in foreign exchange transactions in North America alone. 10 This technology also allows electronic banking, ...
Abstract: As post-quantum cryptography (PQC) nears standardization and eventual deployment, it is increasingly important to understand the security of the implementations of selected schemes. In this ...
SEATTLE (KOMO) — The Washington Supreme Court ruled Thursday that families of four young people who died after ingesting a chemical purchased online via Amazon can pursue negligence claims against the ...
Abstract: In modern cryptography, the generation of prime numbers for encryption keys faces significant challenges, particularly in balancing computational efficiency with security robustness.
It’s a familiar moment in math class—students are asked to solve a problem, and some jump in confidently while others freeze, unsure where to begin. When students don’t yet have a clear mental model ...