In a Nutshell
- Companies are developing quantum-resistant wallets in anticipation of blockchain upgrades.
- Methods vary from MPC enhancements to layer-2 overlays.
- Experts emphasize that user behavior and coordination are potential weak points in the rollout of quantum upgrades.
Cryptocurrency firms are taking proactive steps to secure their wallet and custody services against potential threats posed by quantum computing. The goal is to update user-facing infrastructure more quickly than the core protocols of blockchains can adapt.
This strategic shift reflects a growing consensus that network-level upgrades for prominent blockchains like Bitcoin and Ethereum could be a protracted process, leaving wallets vulnerable in the interim. The timeline for the anticipated “Q-Day” threat to the crypto space may be accelerating, with some projections suggesting a possible occurrence as early as 2030.
One company actively engaged in fortifying crypto wallets with post-quantum security measures is Silence Laboratories. The organization has integrated support for distributed, or multi-party computation (MPC) signatures using ML-DSA, a cryptographic algorithm endorsed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
Jay Prakash, CEO and co-founder of Silence Laboratories, highlighted the company’s alignment with recent advancements in post-quantum cryptography, including NIST’s approval of three specific algorithms: SPHINCS+, Falcon, and CRYSTALS-Dilithium.
Prakash elaborated on the rigorous six-month evaluation process conducted by the company on these algorithms for use in distributed signing systems employed by custodians and institutional wallets.
“Not all of SPHINCS+, Falcon, and CRYSTALS-Dilithium will meet the criteria of multi-party computation (MPC) friendliness—whether they support efficient distributed transaction signing—and a potential fragmentation has to be factored in too, because each chain is picking a different scheme with its own optimization criteria, signature size, or compute efficiency,” Prakash explained.
He emphasized the importance of generating key shares across isolated nodes and producing joint signatures without ever reconstructing the key. This approach serves as a defense mechanism against the looming threat of quantum computers, which are anticipated to compromise current cryptographic systems within a relatively short timeframe. Prakash noted that businesses are increasingly recognizing this imperative.
“Institutions are now embracing distributed signing,” he remarked. “Whether it’s a partner like BitGo or a bank establishing a digital asset division, they all acknowledge that keys must not be concentrated in a single location.”
MPC systems distribute private keys across multiple devices, a customary setup for custodians and institutional wallets. Silence Laboratories’ strategy is tailored to seamlessly integrate within this existing framework, facilitating upgrades without necessitating operational changes.
“Any bank or custodian with pre-existing MPC infrastructure can seamlessly transition to a post-quantum MPC-based wallet without altering their existing setup,” Prakash asserted. “It’s a straightforward code upgrade. Subsequently, they will have a post-quantum-secure signing layer in place.”
The upgrade occurs at the wallet level, sparing users from any required actions.
“With a post-quantum wallet SDK, institutions gain a streamlined upgrade pathway for their existing infrastructure,” Prakash highlighted. “No extensive architectural transition is needed—they are already leveraging MPC. Developers can update the algorithm in the library, and end-users—whether utilizing a wallet like MetaMask or any other—will enjoy the same user experience, now fortified with post-quantum security.”
The divergence in approaches within the industry towards addressing quantum risk is evident. While some developers concentrate on enhancing wallets at a fundamental level, others advocate for protocol-level modifications within crypto networks to ensure comprehensive user protection.
Alternative solutions are also being explored. The developers behind a wallet offered by Postquant Labs are constructing a system that incorporates quantum-resistant signatures atop Bitcoin through a distinct smart contract layer, bypassing alterations to the base protocol.
Parallel initiatives have been proposed, such as the work by StarkWare researcher Avihu Mordechai Levy, which replaces Bitcoin’s elliptic-curve cryptography with hash-based signatures compliant with the network’s existing rules. This design is characterized as a contingency measure rather than a scalable solution and could entail substantial costs.
Nevertheless, the critical factor is timing. Although quantum computers capable of breaching current cryptographic defenses are not yet operational, recent breakthroughs have heightened concerns regarding the timeline. This uncertainty is compelling companies to take preemptive action, even though wallet-level remedies possess inherent limitations.
“If wallets are upgraded to post-quantum and chains are not upgrading,” Prakash cautioned, “it won’t work.”
