- XRPL AlphaNet now tests post-quantum security across accounts, transactions, and validator consensus.
- The network replaces elliptic curve cryptography with NIST-standardized Dilithium signatures.
- A separate proposal explores optional one-time key rotation to limit quantum attack windows.
The XRP Ledger closed the year with an update after its public developer network, AlphaNet, activated a suite of quantum-resistant features alongside native smart contract support. The changes, confirmed on Dec. 24 by XRPL Labs engineer Denis Angell, mark one of its key security changes tested on the network to date.
According to Angell, AlphaNet now operates using post-quantum cryptography across its core components, including accounts, transactions, and validator consensus. The update introduces what the development team refers to as Quantum Accounts, Quantum Transactions, and Quantum Consensus, all built around CRYSTALS-Dilithium, a lattice-based digital signature scheme.
Dilithium was recently standardized by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) under the designation ML-DSA. The algorithm is intended to withstand attacks from quantum computers that could undermine the elliptic curve cryptography currently used by most blockchain networks.
Addressing the โQ-Dayโ Risk Model
Most existing blockchains rely on the elliptic curve algorithm to secure private keys and authorize transactions. This system is considered secure against classical computers but is open in theory to sufficiently advanced quantum machines running Shorโs algorithm. Security researchers often refer to the point at which such machines become practical as โQ-Day.โ
The AlphaNet deployment directly targets this scenario by replacing elliptic curve-based signing with Dilithium. In the updated setup, user identities are derived from lattice-based key pairs, changing the mathematical foundation that links public keys to private keys.
Structural Changes to Accounts and Transactions
Quantum Accounts on AlphaNet modify how identity is created on the ledger. Instead of elliptic curve relationships, account security is now rooted in lattice mathematics, which remains resistant to both classical and quantum cryptanalysis. Quantum Transactions extend this approach to payments and token transfers, requiring Dilithium signatures for transaction authorization.
Validators are also included in the cryptographic shift. Under Quantum Consensus, validator communications and vote signing use the same post-quantum scheme. This change is intended to prevent potential impersonation of validators, which could enable attackers to influence transaction ordering or alter the ledger history.
Separately, community developer Edward Hennis recently authored a Quantum Safe proposal for the XRP Ledger that explores frequent signing-key rotation as a mitigation strategy. The concept implies that even if encryption were theoretically breakable, the short ledger close time, typically three to four seconds, would limit the feasibility of real-time attacks. Adoption of this method would remain optional for users.
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Source: https://coinedition.com/xrp-ledger-alphanet-tests-quantum-resistant-security-upgrade/