The XRP Ledger (XRPL) is ending the year with major technological developments after a year that saw it gain significant adoption and milestones. On Dec. 24, DenisThe XRP Ledger (XRPL) is ending the year with major technological developments after a year that saw it gain significant adoption and milestones. On Dec. 24, Denis

XRPL flips to quantum-safe signatures; 2,420-byte proofs replace elliptic curves

2025/12/26 07:30
4 min read
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The XRP Ledger (XRPL) is ending the year with major technological developments after a year that saw it gain significant adoption and milestones.

On Dec. 24, Denis Angell, a lead software engineer at XRPL Labs, announced the integration of “post-quantum” cryptography and native smart contracts into AlphaNet, the project’s public developer network.

The ‘Q-Day' inevitability

Most blockchain networks, including Bitcoin and Ethereum, secure user funds using Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC).

This math works because current computers find it impossibly difficult to reverse the calculation and derive a private key from a public one. However, this security model relies on the limitations of classical physics.

Quantum computers operate differently. They utilize qubits to perform calculations in multiple states simultaneously. Experts predict that a sufficiently powerful quantum machine running Shor’s algorithm will eventually solve ECC problems in seconds. Security agencies refer to this moment as “Q-Day.”

The AlphaNet update directly targets this vulnerability. Angell confirmed that the network now runs on CRYSTALS-Dilithium.

Notably, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently standardized this algorithm, now known as ML-DSA, as the primary shield against quantum attacks.

By weaving Dilithium into the testnet's fabric, XRPL Labs effectively vaccinated the ledger against future hardware breakthroughs.

Deconstructing the upgrade

According to Angell, the integration touches every vital organ of the XRPL anatomy. He described a comprehensive overhaul that introduces Quantum Accounts, Quantum Transactions, and Quantum Consensus.

Quantum Accounts change how users establish identity. On the legacy network, the relationship between a private and public key rests on elliptic curves.

On the upgraded AlphaNet, this relationship rests on lattice-based mathematics. A user generates a Dilithium key pair. This structure creates a mathematical maze that frustrates both classical and quantum solvers.

So, even if an attacker possesses functional quantum hardware, they cannot find the path back to the private key.

Meanwhile, Quantum Transactions secures the movement of funds. Every time a user sends XRP or another token, they sign it with a digital signature. This signature acts as the seal on the message.

The new protocol mandates that these signatures utilize Dilithium. This ensures that no machine can forge a user’s approval.

Quantum Consensus protects the network’s truth. Validators, which are the servers that agree on transaction ordering, must also speak this new language.

If validators continued to use weak cryptography, a quantum attacker could impersonate them, hijack their votes, and rewrite the ledger’s recent history.

Essentially, the update forces the entire validator set to communicate via quantum-secure channels.

Engineering trade-offs

However, this shift to quantum resistance imposes distinct operational costs.

Dilithium signatures require significantly more storage space than standard ECDSA signatures. An ECDSA signature occupies 64 bytes; a Dilithium signature requires approximately 2,420 bytes.

This increase impacts network performance. Validators must propagate larger data blocks, which consumes more bandwidth and increases latency. The ledger history grows rapidly, increasing storage costs for node operators.

The AlphaNet pilot is designed to generate data on these trade-offs. So, the network engineers will determine whether the blockchain can maintain its transaction throughput under the increased data load.

If the ledger bloats, it raises the barrier to entry for independent validators, potentially centralizing the network topology.

Closing the programmability gap

Beyond security, the new update also addresses a critical competitive failure within the blockchain network.

Smart contracts fill the programmability gap that has held back the XRPL for years. The network handled payments efficiently but could not host the applications that pulled developers and liquidity toward Ethereum and Solana.

Those ecosystems grew because they allowed markets, lending protocols, and automated trading to operate directly on-chain. As a result, they have become the two most dominant platforms for DeFi activity in the industry, with over $100 billion in value locked.

However, XRPL lacked that capability, so activity stayed limited to transfers.

The native smart contract on AlphaNet changes that dynamic. It introduces smart contract tools that let developers build directly on the base chain without sidechains or external frameworks.

These contracts tap into XRPL's existing features, such as the automated market makers, decentralized exchange, and escrow systems, giving builders room to create DeFi services that go beyond simple payments.

That opens XRPL to new frontiers and lowers the barrier for teams familiar with existing smart contract languages. At the same time, it gives the network a way to compete for on-chain volume without relying only on payment flows.

The post XRPL flips to quantum-safe signatures; 2,420-byte proofs replace elliptic curves appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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