Preparing for a safe post-Quantum Computing future

IT leaders are sounding the alarm about the need to invest now in quantum-safe transition planning; lack of clear ownership, budget or executive support are obstacles in path to preparation.

  • Wednesday, 18th October 2023 Posted 1 year ago in by Phil Alsop

DigiCert has released the results of a global study exploring how organizations are addressing the post-quantum computing threat and preparing for a safe post-quantum computing future. Key findings reveal that while IT leaders are concerned about their ability to prepare in the timeframes needed, they are hampered by obstacles which include lack of clear ownership, budget, and executive support.

Quantum computing harnesses the laws of quantum mechanics to solve problems too complex for classical computers. With quantum computing, however, cracking encryption becomes much easier, which poses an enormous threat to data and user security.

“PQC is a seismic event in cryptography that will require IT leaders to begin preparation now. Forward-thinking organizations that have invested in crypto agility will be better positioned to manage the transition to quantum-safe algorithms when the final standards are released in 2024,” said Amit Sinha, CEO of DigiCert.

Study Highlights

Ponemon Institute surveyed 1,426 IT and IT security practitioners in the United States (605), EMEA (428) and Asia-Pacific (393) who are knowledgeable about their organizations’ approach to post quantum cryptography.

Key findings from the study, sponsored by DigiCert, include:

· Sixty-one percent of respondents say their organizations are not and will not be prepared to address the security implications of PQC.

· Almost half of respondents (forty-nine percent) say their organizations’ leadership is only somewhat aware (twenty-six percent) or not aware (twenty-three percent) about the security implications of quantum computing.

· Only thirty percent of respondents say their organizations are allocating budget for PQC readiness.

· Fifty-two percent of those surveyed say their organizations are currently taking an inventory of the types of cryptography keys used and their characteristics.

Challenges organizations face to be ready for a safe post quantum computing future

Key findings indicate that security teams must juggle the pressure to keep ahead of cyberattacks targeting their organizations while preparing for a post quantum computing future. Only fifty percent of respondents say their organizations are very effective in mitigating risks, vulnerabilities and attacks across the enterprise. According to the research, ransomware and credential theft are the top two cyberattacks experienced by organizations in this study.

Forty-one percent of respondents say their organizations have less than five years to be ready. The biggest challenges are not having enough time, money and expertise to be successful. Currently, only 30 percent of respondents say their organizations are allocating budget for PQC readiness.

Many organizations are in the dark about the characteristics and locations of their cryptographic keys. Only slightly more than half of respondents (52 percent) say their organizations are currently taking an inventory of the types of cryptography keys used and their characteristics. Only 39 percent of respondents say they are prioritizing cryptographic assets and only 36 percent of respondents are determining if data and cryptographic assets are located on-premises or in the cloud.

Very few organizations have an overall centralized crypto-management strategy applied consistently across the enterprise. Sixty-one percent of respondents say their organizations only have a limited crypto-management strategy that is applied to certain applications or use cases (36 percent), or they do not have a centralized crypto-management strategy (25 percent).

To secure information assets and the IT infrastructure, organizations need to improve their ability to effectively deploy cryptographic solutions and methods. Most respondents say their organizations do not have a high ability to drive enterprise-wide best practices and policies, detect and respond to certificate/key misuse, remediate algorithm remediation or breach and prevent unplanned certificates.

Organizations recognize they are lacking the expertise to stay out in front of post quantum requirements. As a result, hiring and retaining qualified personnel is the most important strategic priority for digital security (55 percent of respondents). This is followed by achieving crypto-agility (51 percent of respondents), which is the ability to efficiently update cryptographic algorithms, parameters, processes and technologies to better respond to new protocols, standards and security threats, including those leveraging quantum computing methods.

To be ready for post-quantum computing, organizations need to have a strategy that includes backing by senior leadership, visibility into cryptographic keys and assets, and centralized crypto-management strategies that are applied consistently across the enterprise with accountability and ownership.