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I see many people worried about the story of quantum computers destroying Bitcoin, but the reality is much less dramatic than it seems. CoinShares released a very interesting report that debunks this panic narrative that's been circulating around.
The point is this: yes, some Bitcoin is at risk, but it's much less than people are saying. Those numbers of 20% to 50% of the supply being vulnerable? They basically confuse theoretical exposure with coins that could actually be stolen on a large scale. There's a huge difference between these two things.
CoinShares focused on the oldest addresses, those P2PK where public keys are visible on the blockchain. There are about 1.6 million BTC in these addresses, roughly 8% of the total supply. Seems like a lot, right? But here’s the important detail: only 10,200 BTC are concentrated enough to really move the market if stolen. The rest is spread across more than 32,000 different pieces, averaging about 50 BTC each.
Think about that. An attacker would have to break into 32,000 separate addresses one by one to get something significant. It’s not just about invading a giant address and walking away with a fortune that moves everything. It becomes much slower, much noisier, much less profitable. Even with top-tier quantum hardware, it’s operationally unfeasible.
And there's more: CoinShares estimates that breaking Bitcoin’s encryption would require quantum machines about 100,000 times more powerful than what exists today. Google is launching Willow with 105 qubits, but breaking Bitcoin keys would need millions. We’re talking at least a decade ahead, probably more.
Instead of panic, the simple recommendation is: gradual transition to post-quantum signatures. It’s not an emergency; it’s predictable engineering that Bitcoin can absorb over time. The 10,200 BTC concentrated addresses are a legitimate concern, but it’s not the end of the world as some want to make it seem.