Key Points

MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan highlights quantum readiness as crucial for India's digital future. CERT-In and SISA's whitepaper outlines strategies to counter quantum threats. The initiative emphasizes collaboration between government and private sectors. Proactive measures are vital to safeguard India's growing digital infrastructure.

Key Points: India Must Prioritize Quantum Readiness Says MeitY Secretary Krishnan

  • Quantum tech poses disruptive cybersecurity risks
  • CERT-In and SISA release whitepaper for resilience
  • Focus on BFSI, healthcare, and government sectors
  • Public-private collaboration key to national preparedness
2 min read

Quantum readiness is a strategic imperative for India: S. Krishnan

MeitY Secretary S. Krishnan stresses quantum readiness for India's cybersecurity, launching CERT-In and SISA's whitepaper on proactive resilience.

"Quantum computing represents the single greatest shift in cybersecurity in over three decades. – Dharshan Shanthamurthy, SISA CEO"

New Delhi, July 11

Quantum readiness is a strategic imperative as we prepare for the disruptive potential of quantum technologies especially in cybersecurity, S. Krishnan, Secretary, MeitY, said on Friday.

He was addressing at the launch of a whitepaper titled “Transitioning to Quantum Cyber Readiness” by IT Ministry’s Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) and cybersecurity firm SISA here.

Krishnan emphasised that as we go through the digital, AI and quantum transformations across sectors, “the need is to start building resilience in the ICT infrastructures well in time with clarity and agility. This white paper provides the right ingredients for the same”.

Highlighting the importance of this initiative, Dr. Sanjay Bahl, Director General of CERT-In, stated that “CERT-In recognises that quantum computing will fundamentally change the threat landscape.

“We must evolve our security frameworks today to protect India's expanding digital infrastructure tomorrow. This partnership with SISA demonstrates the importance of public private collaboration between private-sector innovation and governments strategic initiatives. We welcome such partnerships to build national preparedness,” he noted.

As India advances its leadership in digital innovation, the whitepaper serves as a strategic learning guide to help organizations understand, anticipate, and respond to the emerging risks of quantum computing.

Designed with the unique needs of regulated sectors such as BFSI, healthcare, and government in mind, it combines practical technical recommendations with a broader call to foster a culture of proactive security and resilience, equipping organisations to navigate the quantum horizon with confidence.

Dharshan Shanthamurthy, CEO and Founder of SISA, underscored the significance of the shift.

“Quantum computing represents the single greatest shift in cybersecurity in over three decades. What we are dealing with is not just a faster computer but a complete redefinition of computational boundaries. The systems that we built our digital trust on are vulnerable by design in the quantum context,” said Shanthamurthy.

This is especially critical for countries like India that have leapfrogged into digital-first economies.

“Our skills combined with CERT-In’s strategic approach to proactive cybersecurity and incident response capabilities offers a holistic strategy for safeguarding the future of India’s digital ecosystem. At SISA, we are bringing forensic depth, real-world visibility, and future-proof cryptographic strategies to help enterprises build resilience where it matters most - at the data layer,” he highlighted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good initiative but implementation is key. Hope this doesn't remain just another whitepaper gathering dust. Our banks and hospitals need actual quantum-proof systems ASAP.
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Rohit P
As an IT professional, I'm thrilled to see India taking quantum threats seriously. But we need more investment in research and training - most engineers don't even understand quantum basics yet.
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Sarah B
Working in cybersecurity in Bangalore, this is exactly what we've been discussing. Quantum computing will break current encryption standards. Glad to see public-private partnerships addressing this!
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Karthik V
Hope they include Indian startups in this quantum readiness plan. Our young tech companies can contribute innovative solutions if given proper support and funding.
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Michael C
While the initiative is commendable, I wonder if we're putting the cart before the horse. Shouldn't we first strengthen our basic cyber infrastructure before jumping to quantum security?
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Divya L
This is why I'm proud of our tech leadership! While other countries are still debating, India is taking concrete steps. Our UPI success shows we can lead in digital innovation 💪

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