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Circle Announces Quantum-Resistant Upgrade Plan for Arc Blockchain

source-logo  cryptonewsz.com 06 April 2026 09:05, UTC
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  • Circle announces quantum-resistant upgrade plan for Arc blockchain, its layer-1 network.
  • Arc’s mainnet will launch with an opt-in post-quantum signature scheme.
  • Circle warned that active addresses that have already signed transactions must migrate before Q-Day.

Circle announces quantum-resistant upgrade plan for Arc blockchain, its layer-1 network built around USDC. They also mentioned a phased approach to full-stack cryptographic protection against future quantum computing threats.

The announcement arrives days after Google’s Quantum AI division published a whitepaper warning that elliptic curve cryptography protecting most crypto wallets could be broken by a sufficiently advanced quantum computer in minutes.

Researchers at the California Institute of Technology have issued comparable warnings. Circle cited both developments in framing its roadmap, stating that inaction is a risk the industry can no longer defer.

Circle Announces Quantum-Resistant Upgrade Plan for Arc

Arc’s mainnet, expected to launch sometime in 2026, will introduce a post-quantum signature scheme at the protocol level from day one. The approach is deliberately opt-in.

There is no forced migration, no network-wide reset, and no requirement that every wallet, contract, or software stack support the new scheme immediately.

Instead, Arc is building a forward-compatible path that allows the ecosystem to adopt quantum-resistant protections at its own pace while giving institutions a concrete option from launch.

Circle described the opt-in model as an advantage over networks that were built on classical elliptic-curve signatures.

By supporting quantum-resistant signatures at the protocol level from the start, Arc allows businesses to create wallets designed for long-term asset security and begin protecting newly issued assets without waiting for a retroactive upgrade cycle.

Circle’s research team noted that Q-Day, the point at which a cryptographically relevant quantum computer can break public-key cryptography, could arrive by 2030 or sooner.

NIST has also clearly warned about what it calls “harvest now, decrypt later” attacks, where adversaries collect encrypted data today with the intention of decrypting it once sufficient quantum computing power is available.

For blockchain networks, the most exposed category is addresses that have already sent transactions, making their public keys visible on-chain and therefore targetable.

Private State and Infrastructure Follow in Later Phases

After mainnet launch, Circle’s roadmap for Arc turns to protecting confidential financial workflows.

Circle’s plan is to extend quantum resistance into Arc’s privacy features from the moment those features launch, rather than layering protections on afterward.

Arc’s private VM architecture is designed to keep sensitive state and key material out of plaintext exposure. The company stated that when Arc’s opt-in privacy features launch, they are intended to be quantum-resistant on day one.

In the mid-term phase, the roadmap addresses the surrounding infrastructure rather than the chain itself.

Circle noted that protocols like TLS 1.3 already support post-quantum algorithms and that major providers are quietly migrating. Arc’s infrastructure roadmap is designed to align with those broader industry transitions.

Circle Announces Quantum-Resistant Upgrade Plan

The final phase of Arc’s roadmap addresses validator authentication. Circle was direct about why this phase comes last.

Arc’s consensus architecture is built around deterministic finality and a permissioned validator set, with blocks finalized in under a second.

That narrow window, roughly 500 milliseconds, gives an attacker very limited time to forge a validator signature before finality occurs, making this attack path less immediately pressing than wallet-level exposure.

Why Circle Says the Industry Cannot Wait

Circle’s roadmap draws a direct line between the pace of quantum computing development and the window available for orderly migration.

Migrating all Bitcoin UTXOs to post-quantum wallets has been estimated to take months of nonstop processing in a best-case scenario.

That figure shows the scale of what any major blockchain ecosystem faces and makes the case for starting well before Q-Day arrives.

The company was explicit about the risks of delayed action. Waiting compresses the migration window, raises the probability of rushed implementation, and creates systemic exposure for issuers, asset holders, custodians, and infrastructure providers.

cryptonewsz.com