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Quantum computing is gradually establishing itself as the next major challenge for bitcoin, reigniting fears of a structural flaw at the heart of cryptography. Faced with this rise in concerns, Bernstein decides: no catastrophic scenario in the short term. The issue would not be the survival of the network, but its ability to evolve. Between technological breakthroughs and protocol adaptation, Bitcoin enters a pivotal phase where anticipation and innovation could redefine its future.
While quantum computers could be operational by 2030, Bernstein takes a clear stance in the face of growing concerns around quantum computing. According to his analysts, this is not a catastrophic scenario but a classic evolution cycle: quantum constitutes a “controlled technical evolution process”.
This interpretation contrasts with recent alarmist rhetoric, especially after technological advances significantly reduced the qubit requirements needed to break certain cryptographic primitives.
The analysis reveals several key elements that structure this risk :
These elements outline a very real but circumscribed risk. The identified timeframe gives developers room to gradually evolve the protocol without undermining the network’s foundations.
Beyond the technical assessment, Bernstein emphasizes the progressive nature of this mutation. The analysis highlights a risk concentrated on certain categories of funds, especially old wallets with exposed public keys, representing about 1.7 million BTC. This detail refocuses the debate on targeted vulnerabilities rather than a global network collapse.
To address this, several pathways are already considered, ranging from migrating to post-quantum cryptography systems to introducing evolution proposals such as BIP360. The timeline mentioned points to a transition around the end of the decade.
Bernstein also tempers fears by reminding that technical and economic constraints remain significant, with potentially very high costs for developing machines truly capable of attacking bitcoin on a large scale.
This perspective opens a different outlook: that of a network capable of evolving in the face of a new technological constraint, as it has done before. Quantum acts then as a catalyst for innovation rather than an immediate breaking factor. Between technical anticipation, coordination of actors, and the rise of post-quantum solutions, bitcoin seems engaged in a new phase of maturity, where adaptation becomes the key to its resilience.