April 16, 2026
Ayesa Digital positions itself in Quantum Safe to safeguard the future of enterprise digital trust
The expansion of AI, automation, and the future evolution of quantum computing are compelling organizations to reassess today the cryptographic foundations of their security.
In this new landscape, Ayesa Digital is already working to prepare for this transition from a practical perspective focused on 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 further heightens the criticality of the trust infrastructure underpinning identities, software, services, and data flows. In this new context, the company’s approach combines architecture, resilience, risk assessment, and practical readiness for enterprises and public administrations.
Álvaro Fraile, Global Cybersecurity Services Director at Ayesa Digital, explains that enterprise cybersecurity “has evolved in just a few years from protecting infrastructures to safeguarding operations, reputation, and business continuity. However, a new question is rapidly emerging on the agenda of the most advanced organizations: whether the digital trust foundations on which they operate today will remain valid in ten or fifteen years.”
This is, in essence, the core of the Quantum Safe debate—“a conversation that no longer belongs solely to the realm of research or specialized cryptography, but to that of technology strategy, operational resilience, and long-term business preparedness,” the executive warns.
In this context, the role of companies with foresight, architectural vision, and proven experience in technological transformation is becoming particularly relevant. “Ayesa Digital stands precisely at that level of maturity: already addressing Quantum Safe not as a remote hypothesis, but as a logical evolution of our clients’ cybersecurity and digital trust strategies,” Fraile notes.
The distinctive value of Ayesa Digital’s approach lies not only in its technical understanding of the challenge, but also in its ability to translate it into planning, prioritization, and structured execution. This involves helping organizations adopt a practical approach: inventorying dependencies, analyzing exposure, identifying critical assets, reviewing legacy environments, incorporating crypto-agility criteria, assessing third parties, and defining viable transition roadmaps.
At a time when many companies still view this discussion as abstract, Ayesa Digital is already integrating it into a broader framework of resilience, secure architecture, and long-term technological readiness. “This is a clear indicator of corporate strength: not only executing on what the market already takes for granted, but engaging early in the discussions that will reshape digital trust in the years ahead,” the executive explains.
“Therefore, the fact that a company like Ayesa Digital is already working on this concept sends a clear signal of positioning: the ability to look ahead over the long term without losing connection with present operational realities,” he concludes.
Ultimately, the post-quantum transition does not affect algorithms alone: it impacts certificates, firmware, machine identities, signed software, legacy systems, and third-party dependencies. The next major differentiator among technology companies will not only be who executes best, but who anticipates structural changes in digital trust earliest.
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