Skip to content

Secure IT

Stay Secure. Stay Informed.

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Sources
    • Krebs On Security
    • Security Week
    • The Hacker News
    • Schneier On Security
  • Home
  • Security Week
  • Blockchain, Quantum, and IoT Firms Unite to Secure Satellite Communications Against Quantum Threats
  • Security Week

Blockchain, Quantum, and IoT Firms Unite to Secure Satellite Communications Against Quantum Threats

Kevin Townsend Published: April 15, 2025 | Updated: April 15, 2025 3 min read
1 views

Three different companies from three separate continents have agreed a memorandum of understanding to advance secure communications by combining their respective specialisms.

Partisia (Denmark) is a business blockchain specialist, and a major player in multi-party computing (MPC). Squareroot8 (Singapore) is a specialist in quantum-safe communications. NuSpace (Long Beach, California) specializes in IoT connectivity and satellite-as-a-service.

“By integrating quantum-safe cryptography with QRNG-equipped satellites, this partnership delivers a revolutionary solution for secure communication and multi-party computation – ensuring privacy, efficiency, and quantum-proof security for the future of data processing,” says Mark Medum Bundgaard, CPO at Partisia

Although much is made of NIST’s PQC algorithms, they will still require genuinely random numbers to defeat quantum decryption — and the only known source of genuine randomness is the unpredictable nature of quantum mechanics. Hence the growth in quantum random number generators (QRNG).

Squareroot8 has developed a single-board device able to produce quantum random numbers — and NuSpace will include this within a satellite and put it into space, expanding its own IoT communications solutions and offering a path to a much wider market of quantum safe comms.

Partisia offers one of these possibilities. It has its own roots in cryptography and MPC — leading to a blockchain based, secure and privacy-preserving secure MPC offering.

The demand for secure MPC is stronger than may immediately be apparent, driven by the combined motivation of privacy laws and the commercial need to be trusted by customers. Bundgaard gives two examples.

“Right now, we’re running MPC on Danish healthcare data,” he said. “If I’m a doctor or researcher wanting to study all the cancer patients in Denmark, I run up against privacy concerns and regulations. No single doctor should have access to all this data for all of these patients across multiple hospitals — but I cannot do the research without the data.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The solution is secure MPC, where patients’ data is split into multiple component parts. A technique known as pre-processing is invoked to maintain privacy— an example could be the use of beaver triples. From a and b, you can derive c. You don’t know the initial secrets, but all c’s are correlated and can be used for research.

Bundgaard gives another example: banks wanting to share data to develop a new fraud detection model. “It’s not just a question of privacy regulations; you’re also butting up against financial regulations. And no customer is going to be happy with their bank giving out personal data to other banks. So, the data is split and correlated in the preprocessing stage.”

This preprocessing stage occurs before the correlated random data is combined for the real research computations. The privacy of the sources is maintained, but it still needs to be encrypted. Here, Partisia’s encryption expertise comes into play. The preprocessed data is brought together in a blockchain to provide confidentiality, immutability, integrity and availability. The firm supports fully homomorphic encryption so that the computation can happen without ever decrypting the data

“We’re kind of breaking new ground in this,” says Bundgaard. “When we look at quantum today, most people describe it as an arms race. Who’s going to do the right thing and who’s going to get there first? And this is where it gets very interesting. What can actually be done in all of this?”

Each element of the understanding between the three companies increases the security of the data and the efficiency of the process. Satellites, while not inviolable, are more secure than terrestrial data centers. The ability to generate quantum random numbers and perform PQC encryption from a single location benefits the entire encryption process. Using the satellite to perform the preprocessing is time efficient. But the real advantage of this memorandum of understanding is that it provides a pathway to many more secure business applications.

Related: QuSecure Unveils Quantum-Resilient Communications Satellite Link

Related: Quantum Cybersecurity Provider QuintessenceLabs Raises $18 Million

Related: Mitigating Threats to Encryption From Quantum and Bad Random

About The Author

Kevin Townsend

See author's posts

Original post here

What do you feel about this?

  • Security Week

Post navigation

Previous: NetRise Raises $10 Million to Grow Software Supply Chain Security Platform
Next: China Pursuing 3 Alleged US Operatives Over Cyberattacks During Asian Games

Author's Other Posts

CISO Conversations: Maarten Van Horenbeeck, SVP & Chief Security officer at Adobe Maarten-Van_Horenbeeck-Adobe.jpg

CISO Conversations: Maarten Van Horenbeeck, SVP & Chief Security officer at Adobe

April 15, 2025 0 1
AI Now Outsmarts Humans in Spear Phishing, Analysis Shows phishing.jpeg

AI Now Outsmarts Humans in Spear Phishing, Analysis Shows

April 9, 2025 0 1
Corsha Raises $18 Million to Enhance and Extend Machine-to-Machine Security Cybersecurity_News-SecurityWeek.jpg

Corsha Raises $18 Million to Enhance and Extend Machine-to-Machine Security

April 8, 2025 0 1
PCI DSS 4.0.1: A Cybersecurity Blueprint by the Industry, for the Industry Monica-Landen-Diligent.jpg

PCI DSS 4.0.1: A Cybersecurity Blueprint by the Industry, for the Industry

April 7, 2025 0 0

Related Stories

Cybersecurity_News-SecurityWeek.jpg
  • Security Week

Insurance Firm Lemonade Says API Glitch Exposed Some Driver’s License Numbers

Ionut Arghire April 15, 2025 0 2
ransomware.jpeg
  • Security Week

Kidney Dialysis Services Provider DaVita Hit by Ransomware

Ionut Arghire April 15, 2025 0 0
Cybersecurity_News-SecurityWeek.jpg
  • Security Week

Conduent Says Names, Social Security Numbers Stolen in Cyberattack

Ionut Arghire April 15, 2025 0 0
Cybersecurity_News-SecurityWeek.jpg
  • Security Week

2.6 Million Impacted by Landmark Admin, Young Consulting Data Breaches

Ionut Arghire April 15, 2025 0 2
VC-Funding_China-tech.jpg
  • Security Week

China Pursuing 3 Alleged US Operatives Over Cyberattacks During Asian Games

Associated Press April 15, 2025 0 0
NetRise-Logo.png
  • Security Week

NetRise Raises $10 Million to Grow Software Supply Chain Security Platform

Ionut Arghire April 15, 2025 0 0

Trending Now

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims grinex.jpg 1

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

April 19, 2026 0 0
Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet botnet-ddos.jpg 2

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

April 19, 2026 0 0
Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched defender.jpg 3

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

April 19, 2026 0 0
Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul google-ads-android.jpg 4

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

April 19, 2026 0 0

Connect with Us

Social menu is not set. You need to create menu and assign it to Social Menu on Menu Settings.

Trending News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims grinex.jpg 1
  • The Hacker News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

April 19, 2026 0 0
Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet botnet-ddos.jpg 2
  • The Hacker News

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

April 19, 2026 0 0
Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched defender.jpg 3
  • The Hacker News

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

April 19, 2026 0 0
Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul google-ads-android.jpg 4
  • The Hacker News

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

April 19, 2026 0 0
NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge in Vulnerability Submissions nist-cve.jpg 5
  • The Hacker News

NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge in Vulnerability Submissions

April 17, 2026 0 0
Operation PowerOFF Seizes 53 DDoS Domains, Exposes 3 Million Criminal Accounts europol.jpg 6
  • The Hacker News

Operation PowerOFF Seizes 53 DDoS Domains, Exposes 3 Million Criminal Accounts

April 17, 2026 0 0
Apache ActiveMQ CVE-2026-34197 Added to CISA KEV Amid Active Exploitation apachemq.jpg 7
  • The Hacker News

Apache ActiveMQ CVE-2026-34197 Added to CISA KEV Amid Active Exploitation

April 17, 2026 0 0

You may have missed

grinex.jpg
  • The Hacker News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
botnet-ddos.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
defender.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
google-ads-android.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.