RSA Conference 2026
HPE’s comprehensive cybersecurity solutions defend AI deployments and prepare enterprises for quantum computing, securing AI and next-generation computing’s future. At the RSA Conference 2026, the proposal promotes quantum-resistant IT infrastructure to protect data.
The Quantum Threat Meets AI Expansion
Cybersecurity concerns are growing more complicated as companies speed the implementation of AI across distributed environments, from cloud platforms to the far edge. In a time when both AI capabilities and quantum computing are developing quickly, traditional security paradigms are proving inadequate.
When completely developed, quantum computers are anticipated to have the processing capacity needed to crack popular encryption protocols like RSA and ECC. This poses a serious long-term risk known as “harvest now, decrypt later,” in which adversaries might obtain encrypted material now with the goal of decrypting it when quantum devices become accessible. To ensure that businesses may switch to quantum-safe systems before these dangers completely materialize, HPE is implementing post-quantum cryptography (PQC) capabilities early on.
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Post-Quantum Cryptography at the Core
The incorporation of post-quantum cryptography capabilities into networking software, particularly Junos OS Evolved, is a key element of HPE’s plan. Upgraded cryptography libraries that conform to new National Institute of requirements and Technology (NIST) requirements are among these improvements.
The modifications specifically support FIPS 203 and 204 compliance standards, including a Quantum Buffer for SSH and software signature based on FIPS 204. To ensure that system integrity is maintained even in a post-quantum environment, these methods are intended to fortify secure communications against potential quantum-based attacks. By the summer of 2026, HPE intends to expand this PQC compatibility to include the standard Junos platform.
To support this resiliency, the company’s hardware environment is also changing. Through HPE Integrated Lights-Out (iLO 7), the HPE ProLiant Compute Gen12 servers now have PQC-ready capabilities, supporting a hardware-rooted trust paradigm that is crucial for safe business operations.
AI-Native Security with Quantum Awareness
HPE’s more comprehensive approach creates a “self-driving” security posture by fusing AI-driven processes with quantum-ready encryption. The new HPE Juniper Networking SRX400 Series Firewalls prevent remote locations from becoming the “weak link” in a security plan by providing carrier-grade protection to smaller, space-constrained edge sites.
These systems are made especially to handle the special risks that come with AI workloads, like uneven policy enforcement and illegal access to AI tools. Security teams may now filter keywords and control file uploads to external AI tools with new hybrid mesh firewall improvements that enable prompt-level inspection. HPE guarantees that these AI-governance tools are future-proof against decryption concerns by including quantum-safe cryptography into these frameworks.
Confidential Computing and Data Sovereignty
The expansion of confidential computing incorporated into HPE Morpheus Software is another essential foundation. HPE makes it possible for critical data to stay protected even as it is being processed by utilizing AMD and Intel’s hardware-based trusted execution environments.
Because it drastically lowers the attack surface, this is especially important in a quantum situation. Data that is encrypted during computing is significantly more difficult for an attacker to exploit, even if quantum capabilities were to someday undermine conventional encryption techniques. Centralized key management further guarantees that these cryptographic keys are safeguarded and handled in accordance with stringent legal and sovereignty requirements through integration with systems such as Thales CipherTrust.
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Strengthening Resilience and Recovery
Since no system is completely safe from attack, HPE recognizes that recovery and resilience are just as crucial as prevention. Improvements to HPE Zerto Software offer better disaster recovery for cloud and virtualized workloads, with particular support for workloads connected to artificial intelligence (vGPU).
After an assault, these features enable quick system restoration to a known “clean state.” The capacity to promptly recover from breaches will be a crucial differentiator for company continuity in a quantum future. HPE is developing a holistic defense plan for the modern enterprise by fusing strong recovery solutions with proactive PQC measures.
The Convergence of AI, Security, and Quantum
HPE’s activities emphasize AI, cybersecurity, and quantum computing convergence. Instead of ignoring quantum dangers, organizations are integrating quantum-safe solutions into their hybrid IT estates.
HPE is establishing a benchmark for navigating this intricate technical landscape by providing resilience-focused solutions, AI-native security, and post-quantum cryptography. These breakthroughs give businesses full control, compliance, and security to securely embrace AI and prepare for quantum-enabled digital age.
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