Yes, sir. RSA is everywhere. It's medical records. It's every classical communication that is still.... The biggest risk actually is that people are storing communications right now for the near term, but quantum computers will be able to go back and retroactively read them all. If you layer on all of these other post-quantum algorithms, that will buy us time, but if all of those do eventually fall under attack, then all of those will be read in the future as well.
It's foundational. If we can get in front of it, this is the opportunity. I don't want to be the harbinger of something negative here. If we get in front of it, then quantum computers will come online and be seen as the fantastic contribution to human technological progress that they should be known for being. We have an absolute opportunity to entirely redefine how we think about chemistry, how we do drug discovery and material discovery. Imagine if we were actually finally able to simulate the brain and room-temperature superconductors. There's going to be so much good that comes from this technology, but I don't want the public's first impression of quantum computers to be, “Oh my goodness, they broke the Internet.”