Challenges in Adopting Quantum Technology

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Summary

Quantum technology, including quantum computing and networking, promises breakthroughs far beyond what today’s computers can achieve, but the road to mainstream adoption is full of tough challenges. These hurdles range from technical limitations and cybersecurity risks to high costs, talent shortages, and unclear business value, making it crucial for organizations to plan carefully and collaborate widely.

  • Prioritize workforce development: Invest in training programs and partnerships with academic institutions to build a pipeline of professionals skilled in both quantum technology and relevant industry expertise.
  • Address security concerns: Begin assessing and updating cryptography practices now to prepare for future quantum attacks, since the data you protect today could be at risk once quantum computers mature.
  • Focus on real-world testing: Participate in pilot projects, testbeds, and collaborative research to explore practical applications and identify technical roadblocks in realistic environments before wider deployment.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Keith King

    Former White House Lead Communications Engineer, U.S. Dept of State, and Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Pentagon. Veteran U.S. Navy, Top Secret/SCI Security Clearance. Over 16,000+ direct connections & 44,000+ followers.

    43,860 followers

    Quantum Computing’s Roadblocks: The 3 Barriers Holding Back the Revolution ⸻ Why Quantum Isn’t Mainstream—Yet Quantum computing promises to revolutionize industries—from drug discovery to AI—by solving problems conventional computers can’t touch. Yet despite the buzz, practical quantum computing is not widely adopted. The reason? The field still faces three major barriers—technical, societal, and infrastructural—that must be overcome before it can fulfill its transformative potential. ⸻ The Three Major Barriers to Adoption 1. Technical Complexity • Qubit Stability: Qubits are highly sensitive to their environment and can lose coherence (i.e., stability) after mere milliseconds. • Error Rates: Even short computations often introduce significant errors, making output unreliable. • Scalability: While small-scale quantum devices exist, scaling them to thousands or millions of qubits with sufficient fidelity is a massive engineering challenge. 2. Security and Privacy Risks • Quantum Threat to Encryption: Once quantum computers are powerful enough, they could break today’s encryption standards—posing risks to global cybersecurity. • Need for Quantum-Safe Protocols: Organizations must invest now in post-quantum cryptography to protect long-term sensitive data. 3. Societal and Economic Integration • Workforce Gap: Few engineers and scientists are trained in quantum computing, creating a bottleneck for growth. • Infrastructure and Cost: Quantum computers often require ultra-low temperatures and specialized environments, making them expensive to develop and maintain. • Ethical and Regulatory Uncertainty: Societal impacts—such as AI acceleration and surveillance—raise questions that lack regulatory clarity. ⸻ Why It Matters: Timing the Leap For businesses and governments, the quantum era is not a question of “if,” but “when.” The race is on to develop applications and frameworks that will thrive once the barriers fall. Early movers who understand these challenges—and prepare accordingly—stand to gain outsized competitive advantages. Moreover, investments in workforce training, secure infrastructure, and ethical frameworks now will pay dividends as quantum breakthroughs emerge. The companies and countries best prepared for the coming quantum shift will define the future of technology, economics, and geopolitics. https://lnkd.in/gEmHdXZy

  • View profile for Razi R.

    ↳ Driving AI Innovation Across Security, Cloud & Trust | Senior PM @ Microsoft | O’Reilly Author | Industry Advisor

    13,633 followers

    Reading A Practitioner’s Guide to Post-Quantum Cryptography from the Cloud Security Alliance made me pause. It highlights something many organizations still underestimate very often: modern cryptography was not designed for a future with cryptographically relevant quantum computers (CRQCs). This threat is also not theoretical. The risk comes from Store Now, Decrypt Later attacks, where encrypted data can be harvested today and broken once quantum capabilities mature. Time, not just technology, becomes the critical risk factor. Key highlights from the guide • Shor’s and Grover’s quantum algorithms threaten most public-key cryptography in use today, including RSA, Diffie-Hellman, and elliptic-curve algorithms • CRQCs may emerge by the early 2030s, putting long-term-value data at risk even if systems are secure today • Data confidentiality and integrity are both impacted by Store Now, Decrypt Later attacks • NIST published post-quantum cryptography standards in 2024 (FIPS-203, FIPS-204, FIPS-205), but enterprise adoption will take time and investment • Risk assessment must begin by identifying which data assets still hold value at “Q-Day,” not by blanket cryptographic replacement Who should take note • Security leaders responsible for long-term data protection strategies • Architects managing encryption for data at rest, data in transit, and non-repudiation • Compliance and governance teams evaluating regulatory and sector-specific quantum readiness requirements • Engineering teams responsible for cryptographic libraries, TLS, VPNs, KMS, and certificate management Why this matters Unlike most cyber threats, quantum risk is driven by time. Data intercepted today may be compromised years later. If enterprises wait until CRQCs arrive, it will already be too late for data with long-term value. At the same time, mitigation is costly, complex, and not yet fully supported by mainstream products. The path forward The guide emphasizes starting with disciplined risk assessment, identifying vulnerable cryptographic functions, and mapping technology components before committing to mitigation. Enterprises should periodically reassess risk, track technology maturity, and align mitigation efforts with CSA Cloud Controls Matrix guidance rather than rushing into premature or unnecessary changes.

  • View profile for Mael Flament

    Chief Technology Officer (Co-Founder) @ Qunnect | Quantum Technology & Photonics

    11,653 followers

    The internet didn’t appear overnight. It evolved, layer by layer, through cycles of iteration. The Quantum Internet is on the same journey. ARPANet and NSFNet, the earliest versions of what would become the internet, were built atop pre-existing telecom infrastructure: copper lines, analog switches, tying together emerging computing systems. What we consider the backbone of the internet: fiber optics, packet switching, and TCP/IP were integrated progressively, after validation through focused field trials. Key components, like optical amplifiers and transceivers, were not off-the-shelf products. They were born in labs as improvements and battle-tested in experimental networks. Quantum networking isn’t just an upgrade, it’s an entirely new stack, built from scratch atop infrastructure never meant for fragile quantum states. Every layer, from the physical interface to routing, timing, and control, must be reimagined. Core components like quantum memories, entangled-photon sources, detectors, and polarization control are still evolving as they are often costly, delicate, and confined to academic labs. But those days are coming to an end: Qunnect has operational devices covering all functions, forming a deployable quantum networking stack strategic partners are innovating on today. So how do we drive adoption? By building compelling use cases and running integration tests. History offers a clear playbook. For example, in the 90s, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) launched the Gigabit Testbed Initiative, five parallel networks, each experimenting with different architectures, custom hardware, and emerging protocols. These weren’t just about testing links; they trialed full system stacks in real environments, enabling rapid iteration and real-world feedback. That approach helped shape the classical internet, and it’s exactly how we’ll shape the quantum internet. Testbeds are how we close the gap between fundamental research and deployable infrastructure. That’s how we go from physics experiments to a real quantum internet, and how we scale it. Platforms like the Numana testbed give researchers/industry a place to validate components under realistic conditions. Enabling co-design across hardware, protocols, and system control. They surface integration challenges and help us measure what actually works. For all these reasons we also built Qunnect's GothamQ, and why we’re helping others build theirs, whether it’s with the teams at T-Labs, Air Force Research Laboratory, or at National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). 👇

  • View profile for Prof Dr Ingrid Vasiliu-Feltes

    Quantum-AI Governance Expert I Deep Tech Diplomate I Investor & Tech Sovereignty Architect I Innovation Ecosystem Founder I Strategist I Cyber-Ethicist I Futurist I Board Chair & Advisor I Editor I Vice-Rector I Speaker

    51,801 followers

    The OECD - OCDE report “Building Business Readiness for Quantum Computing: Key Barriers and Support Mechanisms” (Digital Economy Papers No. 383, March 2026) explores how firms can prepare for quantum #computing as a long-term technology. Quantum readiness involves incremental capability-building—starting with awareness and evolving toward use-case identification, #skills development, infrastructure, and #ecosystem engagement—rather than immediate production deployment. Drawing on #interviews with 16 organizations across 10 countries and recent #surveys, the paper identifies four main barriers: limited technological maturity (high error rates and instability), unclear business value and use cases (e.g., optimization in finance/pharma, drug discovery), high costs of access/training (cloud time can reach tens of thousands of dollars; hardware millions), and #talent shortages blending quantum expertise with industry knowledge. These challenges concentrate efforts among large R&D-intensive firms, risking a digital divide with SMEs and lagging sectors. Support mechanisms include networking platforms, advisory services, technology extension programs, R&D grants, and stakeholder consultations. The report recommends hybrid quantum-AI-HPC approaches as entry points, stronger #industry-#academia partnerships, expanded skills pipelines, and policies to broaden access and prevent uneven adoption. It stresses building resilience, including post-quantum #cryptography. Overall, early exposure and internal adaptation are key to future competitiveness as quantum advantage emerges. In my recent Forbes Business Council article, I argue that the convergence of #quantum, #AI, #blockchain, #6G, and #satelliteinternet demands a shift from Web2’s control-based models to decentralized #Web3/Web4 architectures.I explore emerging phygital #business models—like decentralized intelligence marketplaces, quantum-secure #identity services, and autonomous ecosystem orchestrators—to build quantum #resilience, redefine value flows, #trust, and performance metrics beyond profits.

  • View profile for Mauritz Kop

    Founder Stanford RQT | CIGI Senior Fellow & PI | von Neumann Commissioner | U.S. Air Force Academy Guest Professor

    4,786 followers

    Glad to share a new research article: "A Principled Approach to Quantum Technologies". 👉 Recent breakthroughs in quantum hardware and software by major players like Google, IBM, D-Wave, Quantinuum, Microsoft, and others are pushing the boundaries of computation, simulation, sensing, networking. These advancements hold immense potential to revolutionize industries from healthcare and finance to energy and defense, and to boost general-purpose technologies such as AI, biotechnology and nuclear fusion.   Key Takeaways: 1️⃣ Rapid Advancement & Transformative Potential: Quantum technologies are progressing at a remarkable pace, offering solutions to problems currently beyond classical reach, especially in areas like drug discovery and materials science. 2️⃣ The Dual-Use Dilemma: The power of quantum technology brings both enormous benefits and significant risks. It is crucial to navigate this dual-use character by prioritizing responsible development and acknowledging dual use ambiguity. 3️⃣ Call for Responsible Quantum Technology (RQT): The paper advocates for an RQT framework, guided by tailored principles, to ensure that the societal and planetary benefits of quantum technology outweigh its potential risks. This includes addressing ethical, legal, socio-economic, and policy implications (Quantum ELSPI). 4️⃣ Regulatory Vacuum & Governance Gap: Currently, the rapid advancements in quantum technology are outpacing the establishment of coherent global governance frameworks, unified standards, and certification, performance benchmarking and verification processes. 5️⃣ Proactive and Principled Approach: In the absence of comprehensive formal regulations (beyond national & economic security and export controls), stakeholders are encouraged to leverage self-regulatory tools and best practices to navigate the ELSPI implications. This proactive, principled approach can offer competitive advantages and support the safe, equitable deployment of quantum systems. 6️⃣ Learning from Other Technologies: Policymakers should draw lessons from the governance of other transformative tech like AI, semiconductors, biotechnology and nuclear to inform the oversight of quantum technology and avoid potential pitfalls. 7️⃣ Global Cooperation is Key: Addressing global challenges and realizing the full potential of the suite of quantum technologies, particularly in fundamental research and standardization, will require international collaboration, keeping research and development "as open as possible, and as closed as necessary."   The interdisciplinary research emphasizes that by actively embedding shared principles, values, and standards into the design, infrastructure, and deployment of quantum systems, we can guide them toward much needed collective social and environmental benefit. Download on SSRN: https://lnkd.in/diUd9EhG   #ResponsibleQuantumTechnology #Innovation #Law #Ethics #QuantumAI #Standards #Values #Democracy

  • View profile for Alexander Rublowsky

    CMO | Ecosystem | Quantum | AI | Product Marketing | Infrastructure & Ecosystem | Transformation Driver | Brand & Category Builder

    5,194 followers

    I’ve started spending time around the quantum ecosystem in the Northwest. Not to understand the physics. To understand what it will take for quantum technologies to scale. The physics matters enormously. Whether it’s computing, sensing, networking, or security. Breakthroughs at the scientific layer are what make the entire category possible. Without that work, there is no industry. What I’m curious about are the layers around it. ==> Talent density — not just PhDs, but operators, engineers, product leaders, and technicians who can translate breakthroughs into usable systems. ==> Capital patience: funding models that align with long technical timelines and don’t force premature commercialization. ==> Industry collaboration: coordination across universities, startups, incumbents, and government before clear market winners emerge. ==> Institutional trust: the gradual confidence enterprises, regulators, and the public need before adopting technologies this complex. Earlier in my career, I had a front-row seat to a few infrastructure transitions. At Microsoft, we redesigned how enterprise customers bought across product portfolios. It changed what customers bought and used to grow their business, not how the products were made. At F5, I was part of the shift from hardware-centric products to cloud-delivered platforms. It opened new economic models and deployment options, not how we built security and/or load balancers. In both cases, the technology was real and the harder challenge was creating alignment to drive massive scale. Because technology maturity and institutional maturity moved at very different speeds. Quantum technologies feel destine for the same kind of dynamic. The science is advancing. The surrounding system is still forming. That’s the layer I’m interested in understanding better. #QuantumTechnology, #InnovationEcosystem, #TechnologyStrategy

  • View profile for Benjamin Scott, M.S.

    Director, Critical Infrastructure & OT Strategy & Programs - US Public Sector at Fortinet | Ohio Cyber Reservist | Adjunct Professor

    30,297 followers

    Quantum computing is advancing rapidly, bringing unprecedented processing power that threatens traditional encryption methods. The "collect now, decrypt later" strategy underscores the urgency of preparation, adversaries are already harvesting encrypted data with the intent to decrypt it once large-scale quantum computers become viable. Fortinet is leading the way in quantum-safe security, integrating NIST PQC algorithms, including CRYSTALS-KYBER, into FortiOS to safeguard data from future quantum-based attacks. "A recent real-world demonstration by JPMorgan Chase (JPMC) showcased quantum-safe high-speed 100 Gbps site-to-site IPsec tunnels secured using QKD. The test was conducted between two JPMC data centers in Singapore, covering over 46 km of telecom fiber, and achieved 45 days of continuous operation." "The network leveraged QKD vendor ID Quantique for the quantum key exchange, Fortinet’s FortiGate 4201F for network encryption, and FortiTester for performance measurement." This is not just a theoretical concern, organizations are already deploying quantum-safe encryption solutions. As quantum computing capabilities advance, organizations must adopt quantum-resistant security architectures and take proactive steps now to safeguard their sensitive information against future quantum-enabled attacks. These proactive methods include: -adopting hybrid cryptographic approaches, combining classical and PQC algorithms, ensuring interoperability and a phased transition -implementing crypto-agile architectures, for seamless updates to encryption mechanisms as new quantum-resistant standards emerge -leveraging PQC capable HSMs and TPMs -evaluating network security architectures, such as ZTNA models -ensuring authentication and access controls are resistant to quantum threats. -identifying mission-critical and long-lived data, that must remain secure for decades. -implementing sensitivity-based classification, determine which datasets require the highest level of post-quantum protection. -conducting risk assessments to evaluate data exposure, storage locations, and current encryption standards. -transitioning to quantum-resistant encryption algorithms recommended by NIST’s PQC standardization efforts. -establishing data-at-rest and data-in-transit encryption policies, mandate use of PQC algorithms as they become available. -strengthening key management practices -developing GRC frameworks ensuring adherence to post-quantum security. -implementing continuous cryptographic monitoring to detect and phase out vulnerable encryption methods. -enforcing regulatory compliance by aligning with emerging PQC standards. -establishing incident response plans to handle quantum-driven cryptographic threats proactively. Fortinet remains committed to pioneering quantum-safe encryption solutions, enabling organizations to stay ahead of emerging cryptographic threats. Read more from Dr. Carl Windsor, Fortinet’s CISO!

  • View profile for Jaime Gómez García

    Global Head of Santander Quantum Threat Program | Chair of Europol Quantum Safe Financial Forum | Quantum Security 25 | Quantum Leap Award 2025 | Representative at EU QuIC, AMETIC

    17,298 followers

    💡 Elevandi has published the report "Preparing for a Quantum-safe Tomorrow" summarizing the discussion held in a roundtable at Point Zero Forum. The Swiss National Bank hosted the session with Thomas Moser (Swiss National Bank) serving as the moderator. The roundtable brought together experts from private-sector research companies, academia, international standard setters, and the financial industry. Participants included Raphael Auer (Bank for International Settlements – BIS), August Benz (Swiss Bankers Association), Marco Brenner (IBM), Klaus Ensslin (ETH Zürich), Dr. Frederik Flöther (QuantumBasel), Esther Haenggi (Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts), Dr. Heike Riel (IBM), and Sven Stucki (Procivis AG). The paper includes contributions from Andreas Wehrli (Swiss National Bank). The document covers the typical intro to what is quantum computing and why it threatens cryptography, before entering into solutions and challenges in achieving quantum safety, and practical action points for organizations. Some interesting highlights: 👉 The precise date of Q-Day is irrelevant from a risk management perspective. The probability of it happening in any given year from now is not zero, and the business impact would be huge. Even a 5% risk is too high to ignore.  👉 Implementing quantum-safe algorithms is not merely a technical challenge. It extends to business processes and the intricate links within our digital ecosystems, requiring a comprehensive approach to ensure that all interconnected silos remain secure. 👉 While technical solutions for quantum safety exist, implementing them in an organisation’s IT infrastructure remains challenging. The document concludes with practical action points to achieve quantum safety: 🚩 Identify quantum-competent staff in your organisation 🚩 Assess vulnerabilities in your systems 🚩 Develop a plan to achieve quantum safety, which includes building skills within your team to handle these future changes 🚩 Establish regular dialogue with key stakeholders https://lnkd.in/dSmuS7pg #pqc #postquantum #cryptography

  • View profile for Michael Biercuk

    Helping make quantum technology useful for enterprise, aviation, defense, and R&D | CEO & Founder, Q-CTRL | Professor of Quantum Physics & Quantum Technology | Innovator | Speaker | TEDx | SXSW

    8,512 followers

    Excited about bringing #quantumcomputing to the #datacenter, but not sure how to proceed? In this first article in Data Center Dynamics we lay out three key steps to integrate this cutting edge technology into the data center, and discuss the critical choices a customer must address along the way. We provide new insights on our sector not previously available highlighting the challenges of: 1) Hardware selection - qubit modality, fully integrated or modular systems? 2) Software abstraction - the various levels of abstraction available today to improve usability. 3) Integration strategy - the choices around how #QPU resources are surfaced and managed in a data center Quantum Computing is developing rapidly -- especially in the maturity of infrastructure software needed to make it a useful resource. We hope this article helps interested parties start their journey to adopting and embracing #QC! https://lnkd.in/g9pGENCh

  • View profile for Antonio Grasso
    Antonio Grasso Antonio Grasso is an Influencer

    Technologist & Global B2B Influencer | Founder & CEO | LinkedIn Top Voice | Driven by Human-Centricity

    42,206 followers

    Quantum networks have the potential to transform IoT systems by strengthening data protection and accelerating information flow through entanglement and encryption, although their large-scale adoption still faces challenges of cost, maturity, and interoperability. Quantum communication promises unprecedented levels of encryption through quantum key distribution, a mechanism that makes data interception almost impossible at a theoretical level. Yet, turning this into a reliable, everyday infrastructure requires more than scientific progress. It demands standardization, accessible hardware, and clear frameworks for integration with current IoT ecosystems. Today, the main challenge is not whether quantum IoT can work, but how to make it work consistently across devices, industries, and geographies. The combination of quantum and IoT could create an environment where latency decreases, trust increases, and sensitive data travel through secure and verified channels. However, this transformation will depend on investment, collaboration, and the ability to simplify what is now a highly specialized domain. I believe the evolution of IoT through quantum technologies will mirror the broader shift toward systems that are both intelligent and self-protective. The question is how quickly businesses and governments will align to make this convergence a reality. #QuantumComputing #IoT #Cybersecurity #DigitalTransformation

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