ISARA Insights Blog

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Is Your Cryptographic Infrastructure Healthy?

Philip Lafrance
Feb 08, 2021

What about your organization’s cryptographic infrastructure? Is it healthy? What can enterprises do now to keep theirs in good shape, especially as the industry collectively moves toward post-quantum cryptography? With enterprises planning the migration of their entire cryptographic assets from classical public-key cryptography to quantum-safe cryptography, they can improve their infrastructure wellness now by taking preventative steps with crypto-agile solutions. Think of crypto-agility as the “super food” for cryptographic wellness.

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Is Your Cryptographic Infrastructure Healthy?

Philip Lafrance
Feb 08, 2021

What about your organization’s cryptographic infrastructure? Is it healthy? What can enterprises do now to keep theirs in good shape, especially as the industry collectively moves toward post-quantum cryptography?…

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Mastering the Quantum Challenge for Machine Identities

Mike Brown
Nov 11, 2020

It is no secret that cybersecurity threats are ever-evolving. Each day, security professionals around the world receive reports of new vulnerabilities, new attack vectors, and new challenges that need…

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All Aboard the Quantum Migration Train

Scott Totzke
Jul 16, 2020

Standards bodies, government organizations, and research centers weigh in on preparing for the threat that quantum computers pose to encryption. Take action now? Don’t worry about it yet? Or, get on the…

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Math Paths to Quantum-safe Security: Hash-based Cryptography

Victoria de Quehen
Feb 24, 2020

Digital signature algorithms are a critical component of public-key infrastructure, with applications ranging from code signing to establishing secure connections. However, classical digital signature…

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Microsoft’s CryptoAPI flaw/CurveBall: a teaser of the quantum threat

Mike Brown
Jan 17, 2020

The National Security Agency recently discovered a major cryptographic flaw in Microsoft’s low-level code within their operating system. This flaw, now known as CurveBall, was found within Windows CryptoAPI…

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