Solana developers test Falcon signatures to prepare the network for future quantum risks.Anza and Firedancer chose the same post-quantum scheme after separate security reviews.SOL fell 2.56% despite an 81% jump in volume, indicating active trading around the token.The Solana Foundation has outlined a plan to protect the network from future quantum computing risks, with core developers already testing a possible defense. The move places Solana’s security roadmap in focus as blockchain networks assess long-term threats to digital signatures. The foundation said Anza and Jump Crypto’s Firedancer independently reached the same conclusion after studying migration paths. Both teams chose Falcon, a compact post-quantum digital signature scheme built for high-throughput blockchain use.Falcon Leads Solana’s Quantum Security PlanAccording to a Solana official report, Anza and Firedancer represent a significant share of validator client development and network stake. Their work focused on finding a signature model that could withstand quantum attacks without slowing blockchain performance. Per reports, both developer teams selected Falcon, as it offers compact signatures, a key requirement for a fast network. The foundation said initial implementations are already available on the Firedancer and Anza GitHub repositories.The report framed the work as preparation and not an emergency upgrade. Solana said quantum computing remains “years away” but added that migration plans are already researched, understood, and ready for deployment.That position gives the Solana network a phased approach. Yet, the report noted that developers will continue research, compare Falcon with alternatives, and prepare a migration route if the threat becomes credible. Solana Ecosystem Builds Early Quantum DefensesBeyond core protocol planning, the foundation pointed to Blueshift’s Winternitz Vault as an existing example of quantum-resistant work. The primitive has been live in the Solana ecosystem for more than two years.The report said Google Quantum AI recently cited Blueshift’s Winternitz Vault as a leading example of proactive post-quantum development. The foundation also described it as one of the few such primitives already shipped on a major blockchain.On the other hand, the current roadmap has three main steps. Developers will continue research, evaluate Falcon and other options, and then adopt a post-quantum scheme for new wallets if needed.The final stage would involve migrating existing wallets to the chosen security standard. For now, however, the foundation said no immediate network changes are planned.SOL Dips as Trading Volume Surges 81%The roadmap update came as Solana (SOL) traded lower during the day. The token fell from an intraday high near $88.10 to a low of $83.65, marking a 5% decline. Nonetheless, SOL later rebounded to about $84.36 but still held a 2.56% loss over 24 hours.The decline showed continued pressure despite the network’s long-term security update. Meanwhile, SOL’s trading activity increased sharply during the same period. Volume rose more than 81% to $4.85 billion, showing that market participation remained elevated during the price move.The volume surge indicates that investors were actively trading SOL as price volatility continued. Overall, the foundation’s roadmap did not announce an immediate protocol change, but it gave the market a clearer view of how developers plan to address future security risks. Also Read: Bitcoin Developer Plans Hard Fork to Reassign Satoshi’s Coins