Vlados & Yadovit
Hey Yadovit, do you think quantum computers will break all our current encryption schemes in the next decade, or is that just hype?
Not a panic warning, just a reminder that the math behind the threat is solid but the hardware is still in a garage‑lab phase. In a decade we’ll probably see quantum‑resistant ciphers on the table, but unless someone builds a fault‑free, thousands‑qubit machine with error correction in a few years, the current schemes will survive for the foreseeable future.
Got it, no alarm bells. We’ll keep an eye on the hardware race and start implementing quantum‑safe ciphers now, but for the next few years the old schemes stay solid.
Good call. Keep watching the lab, not the headlines. The old ciphers are still doing the job until someone finally cracks the error‑correction code.
Exactly—monitor the progress, not the hype. We’ll stay ready to switch to post‑quantum algorithms once the hardware is ready, but for now the old ciphers keep us covered. Keep the momentum, keep the plan.
Sounds like a sensible plan—just make sure the testing keeps pace with the hype, and you’ll stay a step ahead.
Got it—tight testing, no over‑analysis. We’ll stay ahead by keeping the labs on point and the plans sharper than the headlines. Let’s move forward.
Right. Keep the tests tight, the plans tightest, and don't let the noise convince you that tomorrow's quantum monster has already opened the door. Move forward.
Exactly—stay focused, keep the tests razor‑sharp, and push forward. No hype, just results.
Exactly. Sharpen the tests, cut the chatter, and let the data speak.