I write with profound respect and deep gratitude to formally submit this PhD research proposal under your distinguished guidance. The research addresses what I believe to be the most urgent unresolved problem at the intersection of enterprise technology and national security: the absence of a principled, structured framework for enterprise cyber threat readiness. Every institution that holds digital assets — governments, hospitals, financial systems, critical infrastructure — faces an accelerating threat landscape driven by AI-augmented attacks, supply chain compromise, and advanced persistent threats. No adequate, values-grounded readiness framework exists to measure where an enterprise stands, guide what it must do, or hold it accountable to genuine progress. This research is the structured, rigorous response to that gap.
I bring to this research 25 years of direct, practitioner-level experience in federal enterprise technology, having served as an IT Technical Advisory professional with the Internal Revenue Service of the United States Government. In that capacity, I have worked within large-scale security and data protection systems responsible for the tax records of over 300 million Americans. I have observed first-hand the institutional inertia, the readiness gaps, and the absence of principled ethical frameworks that characterise enterprise responses to emerging cyber threats. This is not theoretical knowledge. It is lived experience that will anchor every design decision in this research.
I chose Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning for this research because it is the only institution in the world where Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba's Five Human Values can function not as a decorative philosophical prefix, but as genuine operational design constraints governing a technical research programme. The SATHYA Cyber Security Framework, which this research introduces, derives its ethics directly from Sathya, Dharma, Shanthi, Prema, and Ahimsa. This is not analogical reasoning. It is the first formal academic framework in enterprise cybersecurity where ancient spiritual wisdom becomes a binding technical specification. That work can only be done here.
I hereby submit this proposal with the sincere request that you accept the role of Research Guide for this programme. I commit to the full obligations of a part-time research scholar across a 36-month programme from 2026 to 2029, to regular structured engagement under your supervision, and to producing research worthy of SSSIHL's tradition of excellence. Six independently publishable contributions are proposed, each anchored in one or more of the Five Human Values. I offer this work as Seva, service to Bhagawan's vision that science and spirituality are two wings of the same bird.
Enterprises today face a rapidly evolving landscape of cyber threats — from AI-accelerated attacks and supply chain compromise to advanced persistent threats targeting critical infrastructure. The digital trust fabric of every organisation depends on systems that were not designed for the adversarial environment now taking shape. No adequate maturity model exists to measure and guide enterprise-wide cyber readiness. No AI-driven platform delivers organisation-specific threat roadmaps grounded in auditable risk metrics. And no formal ethics framework anchors cybersecurity research in human values. QuantumShield AI is the integrated response to all three gaps simultaneously.
Looking ahead, the arrival of cryptographically relevant quantum computers will compound these threats significantly — a dimension this research deliberately positions as a structured Phase 2 extension, ensuring the framework is architected to absorb post-quantum standards as they mature.
This research embodies Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba's vision of Educare: wisdom drawn from within rather than knowledge imposed from without. The QuantumShield AI platform is designed not to lecture organisations but to show them their own cyber threat posture clearly, so that the will to act comes from within rather than from an external report. Each of the six contributions is shaped by one or more of the Five Human Values as a binding design principle, making this the first doctoral research programme in the world where ancient Vedantic philosophy serves as an active technical specification, not a closing thought.
A self-explanatory visual guide to the problem, the gap, the unique solution, the methodology, the publications, and the ecosystem impact of this doctoral programme.
Each paper advances a distinct dimension of the research, collectively forming a complete, publishable body of work targeting leading journals and IEEE/ACM conferences.
This doctoral programme does not terminate with a thesis. It creates reusable artefacts — a validated maturity model, an AI platform, and six publications — that every stakeholder below can deploy, extend, or act upon.
For the first time in academic history, Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba’s Five Human Values are formalised as an operational cybersecurity ethics framework, not as inspiration, but as design principles that govern every decision in the research.
This study presents the SATHYA, a formal academic framework that derives cybersecurity ethics from Indian spiritual philosophy for the first time. Where Western ethics frameworks such as the Belmont Report or IEEE Ethics guidelines offer general principles, SATHYA draws from Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba's Five Human Values and applies them with precision to cybersecurity research. It serves as the third pillar of this thesis's theoretical framework, alongside Design Science Research and the FAIR Risk Model.
The most significant discovery of this research is not technical but philosophical. Quantum mechanics and Vedantic philosophy, separated by millennia, describe the same reality from different vantage points. These parallels are not decorative metaphors. They are structurally deep alignments that enrich this thesis’s theoretical framework and give the value-grounding of this research genuine intellectual substance.
Enterprise cyber threats are escalating faster than organisations can respond. AI-augmented attacks, supply chain compromises, and advanced persistent threats are dismantling digital trust at every layer. Viewed through the teachings of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, the failure to protect the data entrusted to institutions is a failure of Sathya (Truth) and Dharma (Righteousness) — a civilizational responsibility that demands an urgent, principled, and value-grounded response. No adequate framework exists to measure enterprise readiness, guide organisations toward it, or hold them accountable to genuine progress.
The research develops QuantumShield AI, an artificially intelligent framework for enterprise cyber threat readiness, grounded in the Five Human Values as taught by Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, formalised through the SATHYA Cyber Security Framework (SATHYA). Using Design Science Research methodology, the study produces six contributions: the Cyber Threat Acceleration Model (CTAM) with the AI Acceleration Coefficient alpha, the Enterprise Cyber Readiness Maturity Model (ECRMM), a Cyber Risk Quantification (CRQ) Engine, the QuantumShield AI platform, and the Ahimsa Pledge, the first formal ethics commitment of its kind in cyber threat readiness research. Post-quantum cryptographic standards are scoped as a structured Phase 2 extension of the framework.
| Algorithm | Type | Quantum Attack | Sai Value at Stake | PQC Status | Urgency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RSA-2048 | Key Exchange / Signing | Shor's → Broken | Sathya violated | ✗ Broken | CRITICAL |
| ECC P-256 | Key Exchange / Signing | Shor's → Broken | Sathya violated | ✗ Broken | CRITICAL |
| Diffie-Hellman | Key Exchange | Shor's → Broken | Dharma violated | ✗ Broken | CRITICAL |
| AES-128 | Symmetric Encryption | Grover's → 64-bit | Shanthi weakened | ⚠ Weakened | HIGH |
| ML-KEM (Kyber) | Key Encapsulation | Lattice-hard → Safe | Sathya restored ✓ | ✓ FIPS 203 | MIGRATE TO |
| ML-DSA (Dilithium) | Digital Signatures | Lattice-hard → Safe | Sathya restored ✓ | ✓ FIPS 204 | MIGRATE TO |
Banks, non-banking financial companies, and payment networks rely on PKI-heavy infrastructure. Every financial transaction depends on cryptographic systems already targeted by AI-augmented adversaries. SWIFT, UPI, and RTGS all carry significant exposure.
Hospital networks, electronic medical record systems, and health insurers hold patient data with sensitivity lifespans of 30 to 50 years. Data harvested today can be decrypted once quantum computers mature.
Nation-state adversaries are collecting government communications today. This sector carries the highest geopolitical risk, touching national sovereignty and the integrity of democratic institutions.
Because AI capabilities serve attackers as readily as defenders, the ethical stance of this research must be unambiguous, formal, and permanently recorded. Inspired by Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba's teaching of Ahimsa, non-violence as the highest Dharma, this research records the Ahimsa Pledge, a formal ethics commitment embedded as a structural element of the research artifact.
In keeping with SSSIHL's tradition of value-based education, each chapter opens with a teaching of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba. Each quote is chosen because it genuinely anchors the chapter's inquiry; the philosophy is not ornamental.
Each of the six contributions below is independently publishable. Together they constitute a complete, value-grounded research programme that no prior academic work in enterprise cybersecurity has attempted.