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So the quantum threat to Bitcoin keeps making headlines, but I've been digging into this and the actual risk might be way smaller than the doomers are claiming.
CoinShares just put out a report that basically says most of the quantum drive narrative is overblown. Here's the thing: yeah, about 1.6 million BTC sits in older P2PK addresses where public keys are visible on-chain. That's roughly 8% of supply. But here's where it gets interesting - only around 10,200 BTC is concentrated enough that stealing it would actually move markets. The rest is scattered across over 32,000 separate chunks averaging about 50 BTC each.
That changes everything. A quantum attacker wouldn't be cracking into a few giant honey pots and walking away with massive gains. They'd have to grind through thousands of smaller holdings one by one. Way slower, way noisier, way less profitable even with optimistic assumptions about their hardware.
And the technical barrier? CoinShares estimates quantum computers would need to be roughly 100,000 times more powerful than what we have today to actually break Bitcoin's cryptography. For context, Google's Willow chip is 105 qubits. Key-breaking would require millions. We're talking at least a decade away, maybe much longer.
What's interesting is how this quantum drive conversation has evolved. Developers mostly treat it as a distant non-issue. But institutional capital is starting to ask harder questions about long-term prep. There's a growing gap between the tech side saying "don't worry" and the money side saying "show us your plan."
Proposals like BIP-360 are floating around to gradually migrate to post-quantum signatures, but adoption has been slow. The real issue isn't the quantum threat itself - it's that nobody's in a huge rush to prepare even though the window to do it gradually is definitely open.
Bitcoin moved off its weekend lows yesterday, and broader crypto sentiment has been shifting as macro noise settles. But this quantum narrative will probably keep resurfacing every time prices wobble and people go hunting for structural risks to blame. Worth understanding the actual numbers though instead of just running with the scary headlines.