Articles
Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s quantum challenges are ‘more social than technical’: Grayscale

User Image

بواسطة مجهول

تم الإنشاء April 07, 2026|2 دقائق للقراءة
Main Image

The Bitcoin community has a “history of contentious debates over protocol changes,” said Grayscale head of research Zach Pandl.

The challenge to solving the quantum threat to Bitcoin could be more social than technical, according to Grayscale’s head of research, especially if the community fails to come to an agreement on certain contentious issues.

Google released a paper that shook the crypto industry on March 30, suggesting that a quantum computer could potentially crack the cryptography protecting Bitcoin (BTC) using far fewer resources than previously thought.

Grayscale head of research Zach Pandl, however, suggested the problem for Bitcoin doesn’t come from its technical solution, as “bitcoin has lower risk than other cryptocurrencies” because it uses a UTXO model and proof-of-work consensus, does not have native smart contracts and certain address types are not quantum vulnerable.

Instead, the challenge would be for the community to reach a decision on the way forward, said Pandl. 

The Bitcoin community has been fiercely debating what to do about old dormant coins, particularly the roughly 1.7 million BTC locked in early P2PK addresses, including Satoshi’s estimated 1 million BTC stash, currently worth about $68 billion. 

The Bitcoin community needs to decide what to do about coins where the private key has been lost or is otherwise inaccessible, wrote Pandl. 

They have three main options: burning the coins, deliberately slowing their release by limiting the rate of spending from vulnerable addresses or doing nothing. 

Pandl was referring to a big fracas that erupted in 2023 over the use of blockspace for Bitcoin Ordinals, technology that enables inscribing data such as text and images to a satoshi, the smallest unit of Bitcoin. 

Two years later, the debate may have quietened down, but the two sides continue to hold opposing views.

Related: Researchers say quantum computers could, in theory, be ready by 2030

Pandl cautioned that it was “time to get started” and that blockchains need to adopt post-quantum cryptography, echoing the sentiment from Google. 

Both Solana and the XRP Ledger are already experimenting with post-quantum cryptography, wrote Pandl. Meanwhile, the Ethereum Foundation released its post-quantum roadmap in February.

Pandl concluded that investors “should not fret” for now, but it is time to accelerate efforts to prepare for our post-quantum future. 

Magazine: Nobody knows if quantum secure cryptography will even work

Source: CoinTelegraph


مقالات أخرى نشرت مؤخرا

Bitcoin pulls back from 12-week high as Iran rally hits seller wall at $79,400
Bitcoin pulls back from 12-week high as Iran rally hits seller wall at $79,400

Bitcoin

Source: CoinDesk...

Aave asks Arbitrum to send 30K ETH from Kelp exploiter to ‘DeFi United’
Aave asks Arbitrum to send 30K ETH from Kelp exploiter to ‘DeFi United’

Ethereum

More than $21 million in contributions has been made to the "DeFi United" relief effort so far, with...

Western Union eyes May for its stablecoin USDPT rollout
Western Union eyes May for its stablecoin USDPT rollout

Crypto Market Analysis

Western Union CEO Devin McGranahan said the company will focus on expanding adoption and embedding d...

Coinbase's John D’Agostino says crypto platform stands alone as industry's full-service prime broker
Coinbase's John D’Agostino says crypto platform stands alone as industry's full-service prime broker

Trading Strategies

The exchange’s institutional arm has quietly assembled trading, custody, financing, derivatives an...

Running out of time on Clarity: State of Crypto
Running out of time on Clarity: State of Crypto

Crypto Market Analysis

April is almost over. May is the month to watch.Source: CoinDesk...

Litecoin gives post-attack update, but other devs doubt zero-day theory
Litecoin gives post-attack update, but other devs doubt zero-day theory

Crypto Market Analysis

Valid transactions that occurred during the affected blocks were not impacted and remain on the main...