Ayesa Digital is positioning itself within Quantum Safe to safeguard the digital trust of businesses in the future
The expansion of AI, automation and the future evolution of quantum computing are forcing organisations to review the cryptographic foundations of their security as of today
In this new landscape, Ayesa Digital is already working on preparing for this transition from a practical perspective of resilience, architecture and technology governance
Ayesa Digital has already begun preparing to protect its clients from the cybersecurity risks associated with the imminent arrival of quantum computing. The expansion of AI and automation makes the trusted infrastructure underpinning identities, software, services and data flows even more critical. In this new landscape, the company’s approach combines architecture, resilience, risk assessment and practical preparedness for businesses and public administrations.
Álvaro Fraile, Global Cybersecurity Services Director at Ayesa Digital, explains that corporate cybersecurity “has shifted in just a few years from protecting infrastructure to safeguarding operations, reputation and business continuity. However, a new issue is beginning to feature prominently on the agenda of the most advanced organisations: whether the foundation of digital trust on which they operate today will still be valid in ten or fifteen years’ time”.
That is, in essence, the crux of the Quantum Safe debate, “a conversation that no longer belongs solely to the realm of research or specialised cryptography, but to that of technology strategy, operational resilience and long-term business preparedness”, warns the executive.
In this context, the role of companies with the ability to anticipate, an architectural vision and real-world experience in technological transformation is becoming particularly relevant. “Ayesa Digital is precisely at that stage of maturity: already addressing Quantum Safe not as a remote hypothesis, but as a logical evolution of our clients’ cybersecurity and digital trust strategy,” says Fraile.
The unique value of Ayesa Digital’s proposal goes beyond a technical understanding of the challenge. It also lies in the ability to translate this issue into the realm of planning, prioritisation and orderly execution. This involves helping organisations to work from a practical perspective: inventorying dependencies, analysing exposure, identifying critical assets, reviewing legacy environments, incorporating crypto-agility criteria, assessing third parties and defining viable transition paths.
At a time when many companies still view this discussion as something abstract, Ayesa Digital is already integrating it into a broader approach to resilience, secure architecture and long-term technological preparedness. “And that is a significant sign of corporate strength: not just acting on what the market already takes for granted, but getting involved early in the debates that will reshape digital trust in the coming years,” explains the executive.
“That is why the fact that a company like Ayesa Digital is already working on this concept sends a clear signal of its positioning: the ability to look to the long term without losing touch with the operational reality of the present,” he concludes.
Ultimately, the post-quantum transition affects more than just algorithms: it impacts certificates, firmware, machine identities, signed software, legacy systems and third-party dependencies. The next major distinction between technology companies will not only be who performs best, but who anticipates the structural changes in digital trust sooner.