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Why I'm Building Quantum Document Corridors (And Documenting Everything Publicly)

The Problem I'm Solving

Right now, verifying documents between Texas and Colombia takes 4-6 weeks through the traditional apostille process. That's broken.

Meanwhile, quantum computers are advancing to the point where they'll break today's encryption. Most people are talking about this problem - I'm building a solution.

What I'm Actually Building

A quantum-resistant document verification system between Texas and Colombia using:

  • ML-KEM (FIPS 203) - The new post-quantum encryption standard
  • CUE - For constraint validation and document schemas
  • Real deployment - Not just theory, actual Texas RON (Remote Online Notarization) to Colombian acceptance

Why I'm Documenting Publicly

I'm not an expert in post-quantum cryptography. I'm learning ML-KEM while deploying it. I'm learning CUE while building validation schemas.

Most "experts" wait until they have everything figured out before sharing. I'm sharing from day one because:

  1. The mistakes are educational - Mine and yours
  2. Progress is motivating - For me and anyone watching
  3. Constraints breed creativity - Public accountability forces better solutions

What to Expect

In the coming weeks, I'll share:

  • My daily learning with ML-KEM and FIPS 203
  • CUE schemas for document validation
  • Deployment challenges between Texas and Colombia
  • Mathematical foundations I'm leaning on (primes, golden ratio, type theory)
  • Plenty of "this didn't work" moments

The Goal

If I succeed, we'll have instant quantum-resistant document verification replacing a 6-week process.

If I fail, we'll all learn why - and someone else can build on what I've documented.

Either way, the journey matters more than the destination.


Next post: "Day 1 with ML-KEM - What Is This Module-Lattice Thing Anyway?"

Building in public, learning in real-time.