What is Autheo's actual position on post-quantum cryptography?
Autheo describes its cryptography as post-quantum oriented, not quantum-proof. PQCNet integrates NIST-selected CRYSTALS-Kyber and CRYSTALS-Dilithium at the identity and network layer from day one.
The honest position: the quantum threat is credible, the timeline is uncertain, and most Web3 infrastructure was not designed with post-quantum cryptography in mind. Autheo integrates NIST-selected standards (CRYSTALS-Kyber and CRYSTALS-Dilithium) at the identity and network layer from day one, not as a retrofit. Autheo does not claim 'quantum-proof' because no system is provably quantum-proof; the accurate description is post-quantum security orientation.
Understand the broader Autheo platform
This answer covers one part of the Autheo ecosystem. To understand how this capability fits into the full platform, start with the core Autheo overview and architecture pages.
What 'Post-Quantum' Actually Means
Post-quantum cryptography refers to algorithms designed to remain secure against attacks by sufficiently large quantum computers. NIST began standardizing these algorithms in 2016 and selected its first set in 2024. CRYSTALS-Kyber and CRYSTALS-Dilithium are among the first standards, and both are integrated into PQCNet.
Where It Lives in the Stack
The post-quantum primitives operate at the identity and network layer, which means smart contract developers do not need to implement them at the application level. They are not optional configuration; they are part of the network's cryptographic substrate.
What Autheo Will Not Claim
Autheo will not say 'quantum-proof' because no infrastructure can be proven quantum-proof. The accurate phrase is post-quantum security orientation: a deliberate design choice to use standards that are believed to be secure against known quantum attacks, with the understanding that cryptography evolves and audits matter.
Key Statistics
Expert Perspective
“These finalized standards include instructions for incorporating them into products and encryption systems. We encourage system administrators to start integrating them into their systems immediately.
Citations & Sources
- [1]NIST PQC StandardizationAccessed 2026-05-14
- [2]NIST Finalized PQC Standards (Aug 2024)Accessed 2026-05-14
- [3]Autheo Security DocumentationAccessed 2026-05-14
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