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, as well as approximately 25% of the circulating supply of Bitcoin, are currently exposed to vulnerable old cryptographic keys that are highly susceptible to quantum attacks. When quantum computers mature—whether in 5 years or 25 years—these bitcoins will be cracked.
The Threat
Bitcoin’s security relies on Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA). These algorithms make it extremely difficult to forge Bitcoin signatures mathematically without knowing the private key. For traditional computers, cracking such signatures would take millions of years. However, the way quantum computers operate is completely different, and they could potentially solve the discrete logarithm problem behind ECDSA in minutes or hours.
Uncertain Timeline
The timeline for quantum computing is highly uncertain. It could arrive within a year or never materialize. But uncertainty is the enemy, because Bitcoin requires proactive migration, not passive adaptation. If quantum computers emerge before Bitcoin has migrated to post-quantum cryptography (PQC), Bitcoin could be doomed. Thousands of billions of dollars’ worth of public keys will be exposed, allowing attackers to start stealing bitcoins and dumping them on the market, leading to a catastrophic price crash.
Token Burning
The question is whether a deadline should be set to “burn” those bitcoins that have not migrated to quantum-resistant addresses by the deadline. If about 20-30% of the supply is simultaneously unlocked (cracked), Bitcoin would face a huge trust crisis, and its argument as a hard currency would collapse. Such a large-scale supply sell-off would create a bear market and could threaten Bitcoin’s entire philosophy.
Primary Goal
Bitcoin is the world’s largest “honeypot.” It’s the only financial network where you can directly steal value and have 24/7 liquidity to cash out. The US dollar cannot do this—stealing large sums can lead to transfer blocks, and even if hacked, institutions will refund customers. Bitcoin has no such luxury; it relies solely on trust in the code.
Conclusion
While this survival-level vulnerability has long been recognized in cryptographic literature, the window for proactive action is shrinking, requiring miners, exchanges, wallet providers, and individual stakeholders to immediately focus on strategic planning. The real test is not whether the threat exists, but whether the network can coordinate and systematically migrate to quantum-resistant signature algorithms before sufficiently powerful quantum computers appear.