This couldn't be a danger, in spite of the fact that there are various amazing supercomputers these days, encryptions are made in crypto to totally scramble information. I realize somewhat about hashing however I'm not a PC proficient individual. I accept, what we are utilizing are hashing calculations that principally not permitting the information to be decoded returning to its source. Also, that innovation makes it the most secure and solid for individuals. Before long, these ground-breaking supercomputers won't be centered around decoding previously existing information, yet principally to make more grounded encryption.
Supercomputers can only help those who attack cryptography (cryptanalysts) or your security (hackers). In addition to all of the above, you should understand that your security will be attacked not through hacking cryptography, but through hacking the systems that protect your crypto keys and passwords.
Today, artificial intelligence is beginning to serve hackers, fraudsters, and other security attackers, not the other way around. This is no longer a theory, but a statistic. For example, artificial intelligence picks up passwords to your account using your social graph.
Interesting question.
We all use cryptography, although we don't notice it, because it is built into our security systems, is inside them.
We also use keys to our ciphers, but we don't know them, we haven't even seen them.
The question is, if they were switched, with ones that someone else knows, would we be able to notice it?
That is the question, the answer to which can change the attitude to cryptography based on keys and to authentication based on passwords or other stable factors - as a vestige of old technology, as a source of potential danger, and not vice versa.
Translated with
www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)