Charles Hoskinson, founder of Cardano, has outlined the challenges blockchain networks face in preparing for potential quantum computer attacks. He says the main issue is not what changes to make but when to make them.
The cryptographic tools needed to protect blockchains from quantum threats already exist. The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology released post-quantum standards in 2024.
However, Hoskinson warns that implementing these protocols too early could harm blockchain performance. Post-quantum cryptography is about 10 times slower and creates proof sizes that are 10 times larger.
The debate over quantum threats centers on timing. Researchers agree that powerful quantum computers could eventually break current cryptographic systems.
Estimates for when this threat becomes real vary widely. Some predictions suggest a few years while others point to more than a decade away.
Hoskinson recommends following DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative instead of corporate timelines. The initiative tests whether different quantum computing approaches can deliver useful results.
DARPA has set 2033 as the target year for determining if utility-scale quantum computing is feasible. Hoskinson called this “the best independent, objective benchmark” for tracking quantum computer development.
Most major blockchain networks use elliptic-curve cryptography. This includes Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and Cardano.
Shor’s algorithm could theoretically break this cryptography if powerful enough quantum computers emerge. The industry already knows how to address this vulnerability.
The blockchain industry faces a choice between two post-quantum cryptographic methods. Hash-based cryptography uses cryptographic hash functions to create digital signatures that resist quantum attacks.
These systems are simple and well-studied. However, they work mainly for signing data and cannot handle general-purpose encryption.
Ethereum is pursuing the hash-based approach. Lattice-based cryptography relies on difficult mathematical problems that should remain secure against quantum computers.
Cardano plans to use lattice-based methods. This approach supports digital signatures, encryption, and other advanced cryptographic tools.
Hoskinson said lattice cryptography can run on graphics cards like AI operations. This means networks can reuse existing AI computer infrastructure worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
Hoskinson did not call for immediate protocol-wide changes. He described a staged mitigation approach as a better option.
One possibility involves creating post-quantum-signed checkpoints of Cardano’s ledger history. This could use systems like Mithril and the Midnight sidechain.
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