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Hi, Iamp;#39;m Graham Steel, Head of Product for the Cyber Security Group here at SandboxAQ. And Iamp;#39;m Kristin Gilkes, Iamp;#39;m the global innovation quantum leader at EY. So Graham, thereamp;#39;s a lot of talk about quantum computing these days, and with all of the excitement, thereamp;#39;s also serious concerns around digital security. Most people probably arenamp;#39;t aware how central cryptography has become to our everyday lives. It protects our banking information, it keeps us private online, it protects national security. The problem is once we have large, stable quantum computers, theyamp;#39;ll be able to break much of the cryptography that weamp;#39;re using today. So very widely used internet security protocols like RSA encryption will all be vulnerable to a large error correcting quantum computer. Exactly. The future problem is that bad actors can hold on to encrypted data now with the goal of decrypting it later when quantum computers are reliable and lar