đ¤ Quantum Apocalypse for BTC: Freeze Satoshiâs Coins or Go for a Voluntary Upgrade?
A major ideological rift is brewing within the crypto community. The catalyst? A recent Google report that slashed the timeline for the "quantum threat" from decades to just a few years. Roughly 2.3 million BTC (over $170 billion), including Satoshi Nakamotoâs original wallets, are now in the crosshairs.
Whatâs the problem?
Quantum computers will eventually be able to derive private keys from public ones. This means "sleeping" legacy wallets and even transactions currently in the mempool could be cracked in minutes.
Two Camps â Two Paths:
1ď¸âŁÂ Adam Back (Blockstream): Advocates for "soft" power. He suggests implementing quantum-resistant mechanisms now but keeping them voluntary. In his view, users should decide for themselves: migrate to new secure addresses or stay on the "old format" and personally shoulder the risk. This preserves Bitcoinâs spirit of freedom but leaves a massive mountain of coins vulnerable to theft.
2ď¸âŁÂ Jameson Lopp (Casa): The radical scenario. He proposes freezing millions of inactive Bitcoins (including Satoshiâs) that technically cannot be secured without the owner's intervention. The logic is simple: itâs better to lock or "burn" them than to let hackers seize them and crash the entire market.
What does this mean for us?
The quantum threat is no longer just sci-fi. If the community fails to reach a consensus, we face either a forced hard fork or the emergence of "hacker-controlled" Bitcoins that could devalue the entire asset class.
Adam Back is confident we still have time to prepare while quantum machines remain laboratory experiments. However, we must act proactively.
đ What do you think?
Should Satoshiâs coins be frozen to save the network, or should Bitcoin property rights remain untouchable, even if it means a quantum computer might steal them?
#Bitcoin #QuantumComputing #SatoshiNakamoto #CryptoNews #Binance

