SOLUTIONS · BY INDUSTRY
Cryptographic exposure looks different in every industry.
The same discipline — discover, inventory, assess, prioritise, transition, monitor — applied to the systems, data and regulations that define your sector.
Every sector runs on cryptography — and every sector has data or systems that outlive the protection around them. These are the industries where cryptographic exposure is most acute, and where getting ahead of it matters most.
Banking & Financial Services
Long-lived financial records, payment PKI and inter-bank trust — under DORA, PCI DSS 4.0 and SWIFT CSP. Explore →
Insurance
Policy, health and actuarial data kept for decades — the clearest “harvest now, decrypt later” exposure there is. Explore →
Telecommunications
Subscriber authentication, signalling and long-life network equipment — where asymmetric cryptography is the acute risk. Explore →
Healthcare
Patient records retained for a lifetime, medical devices retained for a decade — protected by cryptography built for neither. Explore →
Aviation — Airports & Airlines
Avionics, e-passport PKI and airport systems with 20–30-year lifespans that must outlast today’s cryptography. Explore →
Critical Infrastructure & Utilities
Grid and OT assets that run for decades, with cryptographic keys embedded in hardware that can’t simply be patched. Explore →
One platform. Discipline that fits your context.
Quantum Sentinel doesn’t sell a different product to each industry. It applies one continuous discipline — Enterprise Cryptographic Exposure Management — to the cryptography your sector actually runs on. The discovery methods, the risk model and the reporting adapt to your environment, your regulators and the data you can’t afford to lose.
Aligned with the standards shaping the transition
NIST FIPS 203 / 204 / 205
NIST draft transition guidance (IR 8547)
UK NCSC migration timelines
EU PQC roadmap
National cryptographic-inventory guidance
OWASP CycloneDX CBOM
Quantum Sentinel takes NIST’s finalised standards as its baseline. Migration deadlines referenced across this site are drawn from published guidance and, where noted, draft direction.
See where your cryptography stands — in your world.
The first step is always the same: visibility. Request a demo and see your cryptographic exposure.