TLDR:
- Chris Peikert joins Algorand Foundation as CSO, bringing deep expertise in post-quantum and lattice-based cryptography.
- Four protocol engineers from Algorand Technologies now support the Foundation’s growing technical infrastructure team.
- A mandatory Pre-ARC discussion phase will filter proposals before they advance to formal draft or finalization status.
- ARC Kit CLI is introduced as the standard tool to enforce formatting, rules, and transitions across all ARC submissions.
Algorand Foundation has announced two major developments this week. The organization welcomed five new team members from Algorand Technologies.
At the same time, a structural update to the Algorand Request for Comments process was also revealed. These moves reflect the Foundation’s commitment to strengthening protocol engineering and ecosystem governance.
Together, they position Algorand Foundation as a more unified and accountable blockchain organization globally.
Algorand Foundation Strengthens Protocol Engineering with Key Hires
Chris Peikert has joined Algorand Foundation as Chief Scientific Officer. He previously served as Head of Cryptography at Algorand Technologies.
Peikert is also the Arthur W. Burks Collegiate Professor of Computer Science at the University of Michigan. Additionally, he is a Fellow of the International Association for Cryptology Research. His expertise centers on lattice-based and post-quantum cryptography.
Peikert led Algorand’s post-quantum security implementations before this transition. He will continue that same work in his new role.
This move follows the unification of protocol and ecosystem operations under Algorand Foundation. The consolidation was designed to bring key technical leadership together under one structure.
John Jannotti also joined as Senior Vice President of Protocol Engineering. He will lead the Foundation’s Protocol Engineering team going forward.
Under his leadership, Pavel Zbitskiy and one additional team member took on roles as Principal Protocol Engineers. John Lee joined separately as Director of Protocol Infrastructure.
As Algorand shared on X, the five hires are described as “invaluable additions to the Algorand Foundation technical team.”
Their work will support payments, asset tokenization, and decentralized financial infrastructure. The Foundation sees this expanded team as central to its mission of global financial empowerment through blockchain.
Algorand Foundation Introduces Reforms to the ARC Governance Process
The Algorand Request for Comments process is also undergoing formal reform. Cusma, who is now managing the ARC repository, outlined the update on X.
He thanked outgoing maintainer Stéphane Barros for his contributions to the process. The reform aims to improve consistency, reduce fragmentation, and avoid premature ARC finalization.
One major change is a mandatory Pre-ARC discussion phase. Before any proposal becomes a formal draft, authors must establish a clear need and scope.
Overlap with existing ARCs must also be examined during this phase. This step is meant to filter out proposals that lack practical grounding.
Every ARC will now also require a named sponsor — either Algorand Foundation or an Algorand Ecosystem entity.
Machine-readable adoption tracking will be mandatory before an ARC advances from “Last Call” to “Final.” This ensures that only proposals with proven ecosystem usage reach final status.
A new tool called ARC Kit CLI will support the process going forward. It enforces formatting, rules, and state transitions for ARC authors.
Cusma plans to share full details at the next Algorand Developer Council meeting. The reforms are focused on making ARCs easier to maintain and more aligned with real-world adoption.



