Interesting work from @Max143672 exploring XMSS^MT, a NIST-approved post-quantum signature scheme for Kaspa wallets.
Simply put, it’s an experiment in how Kaspa users could one day secure their wallets using cryptography designed to remain secure even against future quantum computers.
Why is that interesting?
Blockchains are built to preserve value and records for decades. A wallet created today may still hold assets 10, 20, or even 50 years from now. Research like this asks an important question:
How do we protect long-lived digital assets in a world where computing continues to evolve?
This implementation supports roughly 16 million signatures and distributes signing responsibilities across multiple devices, making it an interesting exploration of both security and usability.
⚠️ As noted by Max, this is experimental research only, has not been audited, and is not intended for production use or securing real funds.
Still, it’s great to see builders exploring what long-term cryptographic resilience could look like on Kaspa.
#tanktuesday With Tankfest this weekend seems only right to revisit the highlight from last year with the German armour column of Tiger II, Tiger I & Panzer III.
https://t.co/lpmiycYUBl
U know what is that? first post-quantum signature on kaspa just landed. XMSS^MT
The script is huge (~84KB) because it has to unroll a loop of ~1,650 hashings on-chain but it verifies. and it works.
isn't that cool?
toccata to everyone
$KAS truly is the best cryptocurrency on the market.
The tech is advanced, the community backs it fully.
We just don’t have millions of dollars to put it in front of people.
A day at a time. A builder at a time.