From slide deck to something sellable
Gorilla Technology just signed a strategic MOU with CHELPIS Quantum, a Taiwan-based post-quantum cryptography specialist, to integrate CHELPIS’s tech into Gorilla’s SD-WAN platform. In plain English: Gorilla is trying to make its networking gear resistant to the kind of future quantum attacks that keep cybersecurity folks up at night.
The company says this moves its Quantum-Safe SD-WAN effort from the architecture phase into product integration and commercial readiness. That matters because “we have a roadmap” is cute, but “we can sell this” is what investors usually care about.
Why this is more than nerd wallpaper
If quantum computers eventually get powerful enough, some of today’s encryption methods could be in trouble. That makes post-quantum security a real talking point for governments, telecoms, and anyone guarding sensitive data like it’s the last slice of pizza at a conference.
Gorilla is pitching this as part of a broader sovereign infrastructure story, spanning networking, communications, and data protection. That could help it win attention in markets where security, compliance, and national infrastructure are all tangled together.
The investor angle
This isn’t a revenue number or a contract win, so don’t expect a fireworks show. But it does give Gorilla another narrative lever: cybersecurity plus AI plus sovereign infrastructure plus post-quantum protection. That’s a lot of lanes for one company, which can be either strategic or a bit “let’s see what sticks.”
The bigger question is whether partnerships like this turn into actual deployments, paid pilots, and recurring revenue — or just more press-release fuel.
Big picture: Gorilla is trying to get ahead of the post-quantum wave before it becomes a scramble. If the tech gains traction, this could become a meaningful product story instead of just a fancy acronym stack.
