At the RSA Conference 2026 in San Francisco, the cybersecurity community is discussing enQase, the future of data protection. The U.S. leader in quantum security and crypto-agility has announced many events, platform demonstrations, and high-level industry engagements to combat the threat of quantum computing on conventional encryption approaches.

EnQase, which has offices in New York, San Jose, and Austin, has established itself as a key player in the developing quantum-safe security industry. The company is showcasing realistic, scalable implementations for businesses, defense groups, and critical infrastructure operators at this year’s conference, going beyond theoretical threats.

Leading the Quantum Conversation

Rajesh Patil, the company’s interim CEO and CTO, is the driving force behind enQase’s attendance at RSA. To close the gap between operational preparedness and quantum awareness, Patil is slated to take part in a number of industry talks and media appearances.

Event highlights include Patil and RSA security chief Shira Rubinoff in-person interviews and booth tours. The enQase booth (#6483 in the North Expo) will host the session at 11:30 AM on Wednesday, March 25, 2026. According to Patil and Rubinoff’s first meeting, traditional encryption is vulnerable to quantum attacks and requires quantum-safe solutions.

The podcast “Security You Should Know.” highlighted Patil. Patil, who was joined by a number of CISOs, talked about the changing landscape of cryptographic risk and stressed that businesses need to start getting ready right away to match new legislative requirements with practical realities.

You can also read NSF Awards $5M Grant to URI Research for Quantum Science

The Full-Stack Advantage: Physics Meets Cryptography

The enQase Quantum Security Platform is the main feature of the company’s exhibit. In contrast to disjointed security patches, enQase offers a “full-stack” solution that integrates three essential elements: a customizable software integration layer, physics-based quantum hardware, and established cryptography.

This complete technique helps firms adopt quantum-safe security with minimal infrastructure disruption, a critical concern for large corporations. The platform’s technological advances include “crypto-agility,” which lets computers upgrade and swap cryptographic algorithms to adapt to new threats and requirements.

Booth #6483 shows these features live. The demonstrations will show how businesses can:

  • Gain total visibility into cryptographic usage, including all keys, certificates, and algorithms across their systems.
  • Implement crypto-agility across complex enterprise environments.
  • Maintain operational continuity while integrating quantum-safe capabilities.
  • Align with NIST standards and regulatory expectations through powerful governance tools.

A Portfolio of Quantum Solutions

In addition to its general platform, enQase offers a range of specific goods and services designed for industries such as telecommunications, financial services, and defense.

Important remedies included are:

  1. Cryptographic Inventory Discovery: A service to inventory all cryptographic assets is called Cryptographic Inventory Discovery.
  2. Secure Connectivity: A high-security substitute for VPNs that uses a quantum-safe communication channel.
  3. Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) & Digital QKD: Network-ready hardware and software for quantum-grade key distribution.
  4. Quantum Random Number Generators (QRNG): Hardware that serves as the basis for unbreakable encryption is known as a quantum random number generator (QRNG).
  5. Drone Communications: Unmanned aerial vehicle communications are protected from quantum interception by a dedicated UAV Encryptor module.
  6. PQC Compliance: NIST-compliant post-quantum cryptography (PQC) solutions for organizations.

You can also read $300K NSF Grant to Boost qBraid’s Quantum SDK Development

Securing the Future of Critical Infrastructure

As quantum computing advances, defense and critical infrastructure operators worry about long-term data. In the future, a sufficiently powerful quantum computer might be able to retrieve and decode data that is now encrypted using conventional techniques.

To solve this, enQase offers physics-based security techniques to go along with software-defined controls. The enQase platform lowers risk across the network, compute, and data layers and speeds up compliance preparedness by integrating quantum-grade hardware with wide interoperability.

Invitation to Engage

CISOs, security architects, and enterprise risk leaders who are presently getting ready for the long-term effects of the quantum era are the target audience for the company’s events at RSA Conference 2026.

According to the company’s outreach, “Quantum threats evolve daily,” and “We’ll keep you ahead of the curve.” EnQase encourages conference attendees to stop by Booth #6483 in the North Expo to get a personal look at the future of cryptographic resilience.

EnQase’s attendance at RSA 2026 marks a clear move toward a quantum-safe society in a time when traditional security is no longer guaranteed.

You can also read National Quantum Virtual Laboratory Gets $16 M From NSF

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