SN 1018: The Quantum Threat - ESP32 Backdoor Update, RCS E2EE - podcast episode cover

SN 1018: The Quantum Threat - ESP32 Backdoor Update, RCS E2EE

Mar 26, 20253 hr 53 minEp. 1018
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Episode description

  • The dangers of doing things you don't understand.
  • Espressif responds to the claims of an ESP32 backdoor.
  • A widely leveraged mistake Microsoft stubbornly refuses to correct.
  • A disturbingly simple remote takeover of Apache Tomcat servers.
  • A 10/10 vulnerability affecting some ASUS, ASRock and HPE motherboards.
  • Google snapped up another cloud security firm but paid a price!
  • RCS messaging to soon get full end-to-end encryption (done right!).
  • How did an AI Crypto Chatbot lose $105,000? ...and what is an AI Crypto Chatbot?
  • Looks like Oracle may take stewardship of TikTok to keep it in-country.
  • Whoops! 23andMe is sinking — don't let them take your genetics with them!
  • The White House says "the cyber guys should stay!"
  • AI project failure rates are on the rise. Anyone surprised?
  • Listener feedback, and a very interesting update on just how looming is the threat from quantum computing?

Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-1018-Notes.pdf

Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte

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For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6.

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Transcript

Primary Navigation Podcasts Club Blog Subscribe Sponsors More… Tech The Quantum Computing Threat: A Ticking Time Bomb for Digital Security

Mar 28th 2025 by Benito Gonzalez

AI-created, human-edited.

In a recent episode of Security Now, hosts Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte dove deep into a looming technological nightmare that could fundamentally reshape our digital world: the quantum computing threat to global cryptography.

Experts are sounding the alarm about quantum computers' potential to break current encryption methods, and the consequences could be catastrophic. According to research from the Global Risk Institute, nearly one-third of surveyed experts believe there's a 50% or greater chance that quantum computers could break current cryptography by 2034.

Imagine a world where:

Every encrypted message becomes readable

Blockchain assets can be stolen

Network services are compromised

Sensitive data becomes instantly vulnerable

This isn't science fiction—it's a very real possibility that could affect literally everything connected to the internet, from your home thermostat to national security systems.

Governments and tech organizations aren't sitting idle:

The US has established a timeline to migrate all federal systems to quantum-resistant cryptography by 2030

NIST plans to deprecate classical asymmetric cryptography by the end of 2030

18 EU member states have urged nations to prioritize quantum-resistant transitions

As Gibson dramatically pointed out, this isn't just about updating a few systems—it's about potentially replacing *millions* of devices and software implementations that rely on current cryptographic methods.

Unlike Y2K or other technological transitions with fixed deadlines, the quantum computing threat has no precise arrival date. Experts suggest a breakthrough could happen in as little as five years or could take decades.

Start inventorying potentially vulnerable systems

Prioritize protecting long-term confidential data

Stay informed about quantum-resistant technologies

Be prepared for significant technological transitions

The quantum computing threat represents more than just a technological challenge—it's a potential paradigm shift in how we understand digital security. As Steve Gibson noted, this could be a transformation more significant than any we've seen in the digital era. Stay vigilant, and stay informed with Security Now.

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Mar 25 2025 - The Quantum Threat
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