NEAR Protocol Is Building a Post-Quantum Future — And Zero-Knowledge Proofs Are Central to It
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NEAR Protocol has positioned itself as one of the more proactive blockchain ecosystems in preparing for the quantum computing era, with its development team publishing detailed research on both the offensive and defensive dimensions of the quantum threat. The layer-1 blockchain, which currently secures more than $137.6 million in user funds, is actively developing a post-quantum-safe signing system and has identified FIPS-204 — a cryptographic standard formally approved by the US National Institute of Standards and Technology — as its first concrete implementation. That solution is scheduled to launch on testnet before the end of Q2 2026, making NEAR one of the few protocols with a specific, near-term deployment timeline for quantum-resistant cryptography rather than a vague long-term roadmap.
What makes NEAR's approach particularly notable is the breadth of the problem it is trying to solve. Beyond replacing vulnerable cryptographic signing schemes, the team is grappling with the deeper question of ownership verification in a post-quantum world — specifically, how a legitimate wallet owner could prove their identity on-chain after a quantum attack without exposing the seed phrase that may have already been compromised. Zero-knowledge proofs are the leading candidate for solving this problem, as they allow a user to cryptographically demonstrate knowledge of a secret without revealing the secret itself. NEAR's CTO Anton Astafiev has framed this research as a cross-ecosystem challenge rather than a competitive advantage, arguing that collaboration across blockchain protocols is essential as the industry navigates quantum unknowns. The technical groundwork being laid now — across NEAR, Ethereum, Solana, and eventually Bitcoin — will determine how resilient the entire crypto ecosystem is when quantum computing moves from laboratory experiments to real-world capability.