According to a recent report from BSC News, RippleX chief engineer Ayo Akinyele is leading a major security overhaul of the XRP Ledger. The upgrade prepares the network for two converging ris
According to a recent report from BSC News, RippleX chief engineer Ayo Akinyele is leading a major security overhaul of the XRP Ledger. The upgrade prepares the network for two converging risks: quantum computing and the rise of an AI-driven economy.
The plan includes hybrid signature technology, and the system can switch to stronger cryptographic protections if needed. Akinyele confirmed the initiative has been in development since 2024, well before quantum risk became a mainstream topic about crypto.
A Switch, Not an Overhaul
The hybrid model is the core of the strategy. XRPL runs standard cryptography under normal conditions. If a credible quantum threat emerges, the network can shift to quantum-resistant signatures without a disruptive hard fork. This keeps current performance intact while giving Ripple a built-in contingency.
AI agents are increasingly expected to transact independently, sending payments for things like data access or compute resources. A ledger built to handle both quantum risk and machine-driven transaction volume positions XRPL for a different kind of user base than crypto networks have served before.
The Institutional Pitch
Ripple executives have been clear about the business case behind the upgrade. The stated goal is to bring major financial institutions onto the network. Banks and large payment providers need assurance that the infrastructure they build on won’t face an existential security gap years down the line. A credible, tested quantum defense removes that uncertainty and turns the upgrade into a selling point for institutional adoption.
XRP’s Quantum Readiness
An XRPL validator published an analysis in April examining quantum exposure across major blockchains. The analysis found that just 0.03% of circulating XRP carries quantum risk. Bitcoin’s exposure, by contrast, sits between 32% and 35% of its total supply.
The difference comes down to network design. Bitcoin uses a UTXO model, in which public keys can become visible in transaction data under certain conditions. Early pay-to-public-key outputs left keys permanently exposed.
XRPL’s account-based model works differently. Public keys only become visible after a wallet sends its first signed transaction, which limits exposure by default. Bitcoin also has no native key rotation.
What’s Next for XRP?
Ripple has staged the rollout in phases. Testing of quantum-resistant algorithms continues through 2026, with Ripple working alongside research firm Project Eleven on validator benchmarks and an early custody wallet prototype. A native amendment bringing full quantum resistance into XRPL’s core design is targeted for 2028.
Akinyele has emphasized that this work started in 2024, ahead of the recent wave of quantum research that pushed the topic into broader crypto conversation. 2026 testing will show whether the hybrid model holds up under real network conditions.
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