The Ethereum Foundation has launched a dedicated website to centralize its post-quantum security research and plans. The move formalizes eight years of work that began in 2018 with early studies on STARK-based signature aggregation. The foundation now outlines a roadmap that targets layer 1 upgrades by 2029 while extending execution layer changes beyond that date.
The Ethereum Foundation introduced the new hub as a single public resource for post-quantum efforts. The organization stated that the initiative marks the maturity of research that started in 2018. It explained that early work focused on STARK-based signature aggregation and long-term protocol resilience.
The foundation stated, “Ethereum is designed to function as a resilient and sovereign infrastructure not for decades, but for centuries.” It added that the transition will strengthen security, simplicity, and decentralization rather than replace cryptographic primitives. The roadmap projects up to seven forks through 2029 at roughly six-month intervals.
The Protocol Architecture team maintains the roadmap as a living document. The document sets 2029 as the target for layer 1 upgrades. It also warns that AI-accelerated development could compress those timelines.
The resource explains how post-quantum cryptography will affect each protocol layer. At the execution layer, developers plan to enable voluntary migration through account abstraction. This approach will allow users to adopt quantum-safe authentication without an abrupt network-wide switch.
At the consensus layer, the plan proposes replacing the current BLS validator signature scheme. Developers aim to use hash-based alternatives, including leanXMSS. They also plan to develop an SNARK-based aggregation system to offset larger post-quantum signature sizes.
The data layer plan considers post-quantum cryptography for blob handling. However, the foundation stated that aggregation at this layer remains under evaluation. Engineers continue to study how aggregation models will function with larger signatures.
The roadmap places post-quantum cryptography within a broader strawman. A post-quantum L1 stands as one of five central objectives. The other objectives include a faster L1, a gigagas L1, a teragas L2, and a private L1.
Most engineering roadmaps expect viable quantum cryptography threats in the early 2030s. However, the foundation stated that global decentralized infrastructure requires years of coordination and verification. It emphasized that early preparation remains necessary due to long migration timelines.
The post Ethereum Foundation Launches Post-Quantum Security Hub appeared first on CoinCentral.


