The Ethereum Foundation has formally elevated post-quantum cryptographic security to a core strategic priority, announcing the creation of a dedicated Post Quantum team and a series of initiatives aimed at hardening the network against future quantum computing threats.
In a post on X, Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake said the new team will be led by Thomas Coratger, with support from cryptography contributor Emile, known for work on leanVM.
The announcement marks a shift from years of quiet research to an active engineering phase that includes coordination across Ethereum’s core engineering community.
From Research To Network-Wide Execution
The foundation plans bi-weekly All Core Devs breakout calls focused on post-quantum transactions, including work on dedicated precompiles, account abstraction, and transaction signature aggregation using leanVM.
Multi-client post-quantum consensus test networks are already operational, involving teams such as Lighthouse, Grandine, Zeam and Prysm, coordinated through weekly interoperability sessions.
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Funding, Devnets And Cryptographic Bets
To spur research, the Foundation announced two $1 million prize initiatives: a new Poseidon Prize aimed at strengthening the Poseidon hash function, and the existing Proximity Prize supporting broader post-quantum cryptographic work.
These bounties reflect a strategic investment in hash-based cryptographic foundations that Ethereum believes will offer strong, efficient security against quantum capabilities.
The Foundation also outlined plans for future events, including a three-day post-quantum workshop in October and a dedicated PQ day ahead of EthCC, to convene experts and developers around advancing post-quantum implementations.
A full roadmap will be published on a forthcoming pq.ethereum.org site, targeting a transition with zero fund loss and zero network downtime.
Why It Matters
The move comes amid broader industry attention to quantum computing’s potential to disrupt cryptographic systems.
While quantum computers capable of breaking current encryption do not yet exist, experts have long warned of the need for post-quantum cryptography to protect blockchain networks built on public-key algorithms now in use.
Ethereum’s accelerated push highlights a proactive approach to long-term security that bridges research and practical development, positioning the network to adapt before quantum computing advances threaten existing cryptographic assumptions.
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