About the Authors
Arthur Herman, Ph.D., is a Senior Fellow at Hudson Institute and Pulitzer Prize
finalist author of 10 books, including 1917: Lenin, Wilson, and the Birth of the New
World Disorder (HarperCollins, 2017). He is also the author of the Hudson Institute
report Pacific Partners: Forging the U.S.-Japan Special Relationship (2017).
His New York Times bestseller How the Scots Invented the Modern World has sold
more than half a million copies worldwide, and his Freedom’s Forge: How American
Business Produced Victory in World War Two, was named by the Economist as one
of the most notable books of 2012.
He has written extensively on the intersection of technology, policy, and national
security for more than half a decade. In addition, he has published several articles on
quantum computing, including “Winning the Quantum Race” (American Affairs
Summer 2018 edition), “The Computer That Could Change the World” (Wall Street
Journal, October 2017), and “Quantum Cryptography: A Boon for Security” (National
Review, March 2017). On October 17, 2017, he convened “The Coming Quantum
Revolution: Security and Policy Implications,” Washington, D.C.’s first public
conference bringing together the quantum computer and quantum cybersecurity
communities, including from Canada and Australia.
Idalia Friedson
is a former Research Associate and Project Manager at Hudson
Institute
, where she helped co-found the Quantum Alliance Initiative and is
currently a member of the Advisory Board. Her published articles include “How
Quantum Computing Threatens Blockchain” (National Review) and “Behind
Enemy Transmission Lines” (National Review), which emphasizes the role that
quantum cybersecurity can play in securing the electric grid. She assisted in
convening “The Coming Quantum Revolution: Security and Policy Implications,”
where she chaired a panel on quantum cybersecurity. She graduated from Amherst
College with a B.A. in law, jurisprudence, and social thought.
Arthur Herman & Idalia Friedson
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