For years, the conversation around quantum computing and cryptocurrency has been dominated by a single, breathless question: Will a quantum breakthrough kill Bitcoin? The fear is simple enough. Bitcoin relies on cryptographic assumptions that could, one day, be broken by a sufficiently powerful quantum computer. If that happens, the thinking goes, the entire system collapses. Wallets could be drained. Property rights could be violated. Trust, the foundation of the protocol, evaporates. As someone who has spent decades working at the intersection of cryptography, maths, and blockchain systems, I understand the anxiety. I’ve had this conversation with researchers like Professor Scott Aronson, one of the foremost experts on quantum computation. And while quantum computing will transform many fields, we need to separate real risks from science-fiction panic.
Claims that Quantum Computing will destroy Bitcoin may be exaggerated, but Bitcoin will need to adapt.
Yes. Quantum computers that can break the asymmetric crypto kill Bitcoin dead. The only fix at this point is a hardfork where all the old keys are invalidated which is tantamount to an exchange for another coin.
This article is fluff.
Yes. Quantum computers that can break the asymmetric crypto kill Bitcoin dead. The only fix at this point is a hardfork where all the old keys are invalidated which is tantamount to an exchange for another coin.