TubeReads

Quantum Risk And Bitcoin: Preparing For A Post-Cryptographic World

A trillion-dollar network faces an invisible countdown. Quantum computers capable of breaking Bitcoin's cryptography may arrive sooner than expected—perhaps within years, not decades—yet the community remains divided on how to respond. Should vulnerable coins, including Satoshi's estimated 1.1 million Bitcoin, be burned to prevent malicious actors from extracting $200 billion? Or does the integrity of property rights demand that the network simply let them sit as honeypots for whoever cracks the code first? The debate over how—and whether—to upgrade Bitcoin's cryptography reveals deeper tensions about coordination, technological agility, and the philosophy that underpins digital gold.

Duración del vídeo: 55:45·Publicado 21 may 2026·Idioma del vídeo: English
6–7 min de lectura·10,475 palabras habladasresumido a 1,319 palabras (8x)·

1

Puntos clave

1

Quantum computers threaten Bitcoin by breaking digital signatures, allowing attackers to authorize transactions without private keys—potentially targeting static addresses first, then mempool transactions once clock speeds improve.

2

Roughly 2.5 million Bitcoin (including 1.1 million Satoshi coins) sit in addresses with exposed or static public keys, representing approximately $200 billion in extractable value for the first quantum attacker.

3

Bitcoin will likely be the last major blockchain to upgrade to post-quantum cryptography due to its conservative culture and coordination challenges, even as Ethereum and others plan upgrades by 2029.

4

Post-quantum signature schemes introduce severe performance trade-offs—transaction throughput could drop from 7 TPS to as low as 0.3 TPS—making developers hesitant to commit before optimal schemes emerge.

5

The community is split three ways on vulnerable coins: burn them, leave them as rewards for quantum advancement, or redistribute them to extend miner incentives at the end of the supply curve—with no clear consensus emerging.

En resumen

Bitcoin's quantum vulnerability is no longer theoretical, and the community must choose between preserving absolute property rights or proactively mitigating existential inflation risk—but the clock is ticking, and consensus may take longer to achieve than the technology takes to arrive.


2

How Quantum Computers Break Bitcoin

Quantum machines can forge signatures without private keys, threatening Bitcoin's authorization layer.

Quantum computers attack Bitcoin by breaking the digital signature cryptography that authorizes transactions. Normally, a private key generates a signature that proves ownership when spending Bitcoin. A sufficiently powerful quantum computer can generate valid signatures using only the public key—no private key required. This means an attacker could authorize transactions on behalf of legitimate owners without their consent.

The threat unfolds in two stages. «Slow clock» quantum computers—likely neutral atom or trapped ion machines—could take weeks or months to crack cryptography, targeting static addresses with permanently exposed public keys. «Fast clock» systems—potentially superconducting or photonic—could operate in under 10 minutes, attacking transactions while they sit in the mempool waiting for confirmation. Once fast-clock capability arrives, on-chain migration to quantum-safe schemes becomes impossible, as any migration transaction itself becomes vulnerable mid-flight.

Public key exposure happens in specific circumstances. Addresses that have sent transactions expose their public keys on-chain for network verification. Additionally, infrastructure like Lightning Network nodes, exchange cold wallets, and cross-chain bridges often use static multisig addresses that cannot avoid repeated public key exposure. This architectural reality means approximately one-third of all Bitcoin sits in vulnerable addresses today.


3

The $200 Billion Honeypot

Roughly 2.5 million Bitcoin in exposed addresses represent an irresistible target for quantum attackers.

Satoshi's Vulnerable Holdings
1.1 million BTC
Mined in Bitcoin's early days with exposed pay-to-public-key addresses
Never-Spent Early Coins
600,000 BTC
Additional coins from early era presumed lost or abandoned
Total Estimated Vulnerable Supply
2.5 million BTC
Includes all coins in addresses with exposed public keys (Jameson Lopp estimate)
Current Dollar Value at Risk
~$200 billion
Approximately 10% of Bitcoin's total supply exposed to quantum attack
Proportion of Network Exposed
~33%
One-third of Bitcoin network sits in addresses with exposed public keys

4

Google's Quantum Progress Warning

Recent breakthroughs in error correction bring cryptographic threats closer to reality.

2024 Willow was basically Google's demonstration that you can actually do error correction effectively with these systems. So, it doesn't mean that there is no path for them to scale. It just means it's hard.

Alex Pruden


5

Competing Quantum Computing Architectures

❄️
Superconducting Qubits
Fast clock speeds but difficult to scale. Require extreme cooling (dilution refrigerators). IBM and Google's traditional approach—demonstrated error correction in 2024 but face immense engineering challenges to reach cryptographic scale.
⚛️
Neutral Atoms
Slower clock speeds but easier to scale and connect. Use stable atomic qubits that don't require extreme cooling. Can leverage advanced QLDPC error-correcting codes. Most likely to cross cryptographic threshold first, potentially in slow-clock regime.
💎
Silicon Spins
Theoretical «generation three» approach using electron spin in silicon. Could theoretically leap from zero to million-qubit chips rapidly by leveraging existing semiconductor manufacturing. Highly speculative but potentially disruptive.
💡
Photonics
Uses light particles for quantum computation. Fast in theory but many system components remain undemonstrated. Error correction capabilities uncertain. More speculative timeline than neutral atoms.

6

Why Bitcoin Can't Upgrade Quickly

Performance trade-offs and developer conservatism create dangerous inertia on quantum preparedness.

Post-quantum signature schemes impose severe performance penalties that make developers hesitant to commit. Hash-based signatures can reduce Bitcoin's throughput from 7 transactions per second to as low as 0.3 TPS—a 95% degradation. Even the more efficient SPHINCS+ scheme would drop capacity to 4 TPS. These signatures balloon from under 100 bytes to several kilobytes or tens of kilobytes, drastically limiting how many transactions fit in each block.

Developer culture compounds the problem. Bitcoin's engineering community values extreme conservatism—deploying only time-tested cryptography with decades of scrutiny. Lattice-based cryptography, despite existing for years and receiving NIST standardization, faces philosophical resistance because it introduces new mathematical assumptions developers don't fully trust. Meanwhile, hash-based signatures, though trusted, create enormous complexity for wallet infrastructure and custody operations, particularly for multisignature and MPC implementations that institutional holders depend on.

The network lacks a «quantum czar»—no developer has claimed ownership of the problem. Bitcoin operates through decentralized, incremental improvements by specialists working on narrow optimizations. This structure, normally a strength, becomes a liability when confronting existential risk requiring coordinated action. As Nick Carter observed: «We've had two meaningful changes to the network in the last decade that were not very controversial»—and quantum mitigation will be intensely controversial, particularly regarding Satoshi's coins.


7

The Three-Way Split on Satoshi's Coins

Community divides evenly on burning vulnerable coins, leaving them exposed, or redistributing them.

PROPERTY RIGHTS ABSOLUTISM
Leave Them Vulnerable
Bitcoin's integrity depends on inviolable property rights—even for dormant coins. Satoshi chose not to burn these holdings, and the network should not override that choice through retroactive intervention. If quantum computing advances enough to extract them, that becomes just reward for technological achievement. Any protocol change that confiscates or burns coins based on moral judgments sets a dangerous precedent and undermines Bitcoin's core philosophy. The market has already priced in these coins' existence; their potential return to circulation is a known risk.
EXISTENTIAL RISK MITIGATION
Burn or Redistribute
Allowing 10% unexpected inflation ($200 billion) to fall into unknown hands—potentially hostile state actors—threatens Bitcoin's digital gold narrative and network stability. These coins were never truly part of the circulating supply; Satoshi likely intended them as burned. The preferred solution: remove them from circulation and redistribute them to extend the mining reward schedule beyond 2140, strengthening long-term security incentives. This prevents catastrophic volatility while preserving the 21 million supply cap. Economic rationality demands intervention when the alternative is existential disruption.

8

The Hype Problem in Quantum Computing

Capital-intensive ventures overstate progress, making genuine threat assessment difficult for Bitcoin community.

⚠️

The Hype Problem in Quantum Computing

Quantum computing companies are structurally incentivized to exaggerate progress because they burn enormous capital with no near-term commercial applications to generate returns. The BS-to-reality ratio is extraordinarily high, with partnerships announced via press release that amount to nothing substantive. This creates a «cry wolf» dynamic where genuine breakthroughs—like demonstrated error correction—get dismissed alongside hype, making it nearly impossible for the Bitcoin community to calibrate appropriate urgency.


9

The American Quantum Victory Scenario

Both experts hope the U.S. develops quantum computing first and confiscates vulnerable coins.

If we had to change Bitcoin in some way to accommodate this, I would do the same as Alex is saying, but my first choice is actually we leave them there and then we just hope that America wins and then we in an orderly manner confiscate the coins for safekeeping while the government does it with Google or whoever. So that would be the best choice. So everything everyone wins in that case.

Nick Carter


10

Valores mencionados

BTC-USDBitcoin
LTC-USDLitecoin
ETH-USDEthereum

11

Personas

David Puell
Bitcoin On-Chain Analyst
host
Nick Carter
General Partner, Castle Island Ventures
guest
Alex Pruden
CEO, Project 11
guest
Satoshi Nakamoto
Bitcoin Creator
mentioned
Jameson Lopp
Bitcoin Security Expert
mentioned

Glosario
Shor's AlgorithmThe quantum algorithm that can efficiently factor large numbers and break public-key cryptography, rendering classical digital signatures vulnerable.
UTXOUnspent Transaction Output—Bitcoin's accounting model where each coin exists as a discrete output that can be spent in future transactions.
MempoolThe waiting area where Bitcoin transactions sit before being confirmed and added to a block, typically taking under 10 minutes.
QLDPC CodesQuantum Low-Density Parity-Check codes—advanced error correction schemes that enable more efficient creation of logical qubits from physical qubits, particularly suited to neutral atom architectures.
Cryptographic AgilityThe practice of supporting multiple cryptographic schemes simultaneously, allowing networks to migrate between algorithms as vulnerabilities emerge without catastrophic failure.

Aviso legal: Este es un resumen generado por IA de un vídeo de YouTube con fines educativos y de referencia. No constituye asesoramiento de inversión, financiero o legal. Verifique siempre la información con las fuentes originales antes de tomar decisiones. TubeReads no está afiliado con el creador de contenido.