Beyond QKD: How Decentralized Key Management Overcomes the Five Limitations the NSA Identified with Quantum Key Distribution

The National Security Agency's advisory on Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) and Quantum Cryptography (QC) identifies five specific technical limitations that prevent the agency from recommending QKD for securing National Security Systems. These aren't minor caveats as they represent fundamental architectural constraints that prevent QKD from operating at the scale, flexibility, and assurance level modern defense operations demand. Yet the underlying operational need QKD was designed to address, secure, resilient cryptographic key distribution across contested, distributed environments, remains one of the most pressing challenges in national defense. The 2026 National Defense Strategy makes this explicit, mandating modernized key management that operates across distributed networks. The Q-BID Critical Technology Area adds requirements for assured communications in contested electromagnetic environments.Qanapi's Decentralized Key Management Service (DKMS) approaches this problem from a fundamentally different direction. Rather than relying on quantum physics to secure key transmission, DKMS uses Verifiable Concealed Shares (VCS). VCS is a patent-pending approach built on threshold cryptography with a goal to eliminate the need for secure point-to-point key transmission entirely. The result is a system that achieves the security objectives QKD promises while avoiding every limitation the NSA has identified.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions apply.

IMPORTANT NOTICE
Any information you supply is subject to our privacy policy. Access to this content is available to registered members at no cost. In order to provide you with this free service, Government Executive Media Group may share member registration information and other information you have provided to us with content sponsors.