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- Quantum Defense Rises as Organizations Turn to Superposition for Cyber Protection
Quantum Defense Rises as Organizations Turn to Superposition for Cyber Protection
The Dawn of a New Security Paradigm

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Interesting Tech Fact:
Long before quantum protection emerged, one of the earliest examples of secure networking dates back to the Cold War era with the Soviet Union’s “M-125 Fialka” cipher machine, which was used to encrypt diplomatic and military communications across wired systems. Unlike its better-known predecessor, the Enigma, the Fialka incorporated advanced rotors and punched card mechanisms that made decryption nearly impossible without the original hardware. It was among the first technologies to highlight the need for secure end-to-end transmission in global communications, laying the groundwork for today’s encrypted networking protocols. In many ways, quantum-secured channels are the modern successor to these early machines—replacing mechanical rotors with entangled photons, but driven by the same goal of making interception impossible.