Quantum-Infinite.com: Quantum computing just moved from “future risk” to “boardroom priority.” Google has accelerated its post-quantum cryptography (PQC) migration timeline to 2029, pulling the industry forward by nearly a decade. At the same time, research tied to Stanford University is showing that breaking today’s encryption may require far fewer resources than previously believed, while NVIDIA is accelerating quantum error correction through AI-driven systems. Taken together, these signals are clear: the window to prepare is shrinking faster than expected. And with “Harvest Now, Decrypt Later” already underway, sensitive data being captured today could be exposed within the decade.

For financial institutions, this is not a theoretical shift—it’s a structural one. Core systems like PKI, TLS, and long-lived data archives are all in scope, and the migration effort will be one of the largest in cybersecurity history. At Quantum Infinite, we believe the transition must happen without introducing new risk, which is why our zero data movement PQC model allows institutions to assess, pilot, and migrate within their own environments—securely and without disruption. 2029 is no longer a distant milestone; it is an operational deadline. The only real question now is: will you migrate in control, or react under pressure?