Quick Facts
- Category: Technology
- Published: 2026-04-30 18:44:27
- How to Leverage Congressional Hearings to Safeguard NIH Funding and Vaccine Research
- GIMP 3.2.4 Update Fixes Layer Rasterization Bugs, Improves Stability
- Software Engineer Builds Fully Functional Game Boy Emulator in F# to Demystify Computer Architecture
- Exploring Elon Musk confirms xAI used OpenAI’s models to train Grok
- GPT-5.5 Hits Microsoft Foundry: Enterprise AI Agents Gain Advanced Reasoning and Autonomous Execution
For the rest of the article, Kyber refers to the ransomware; the algorithm is referred to as ML-KEM. A relatively new ransomware family is using a novel approach to hype the strength of the encryption used to scramble files—making, or at least claiming, that it is protected against attacks by quantum computers. Kyber, as the ransomware is called, has been around since at least last September and quickly attracted attention for the claim that it used ML-KEM, short for Module Lattice-based Key Encapsulation Mechanism and is a standard shepherded by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The Kyber ransomware name comes from the alternate name for ML-KEM, which is also Kyber.
It's all about marketing
ML-KEM is designed to replace Elliptic Curve and RSA cryptosystems, both of which are based on problems that quantum computers with sufficient strength can tackle.Read full article Comments ML-KEM is an asymmetric encryption method for exchanging keys. It involves problems based on lattices, a structure in mathematics that quantum computers have no advantage in solving over classic computing.
