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Saw Shaw from ElizaOS drop some interesting thoughts on quantum computing and Bitcoin security. Everyone's been freaking out about quantum threats lately, but his take is pretty grounded.
So here's the thing - people throw around 'quantum computing will break Bitcoin' like it's inevitable, but Shaw breaks down why that's not quite accurate. When it comes to Grover's algorithm specifically, yeah it does reduce the search space for SHA-256, but only from 2^256 down to 2^128. That's still astronomically secure. We're talking about computational power that doesn't exist yet.
Then there's Shor's algorithm, which gets more attention because it theoretically threatens RSA and ECDSA. But Shaw makes the point that this requires heavy preprocessing and honestly, it's not even close to being practically implemented at scale. The real issue is that even if someone had a quantum computer powerful enough, breaking Bitcoin would require executing everything so fast that all the encrypted data gets exposed simultaneously. That's not happening tomorrow.
What I found refreshing is that Shaw's basically calling out the fearmongering here. A lot of the quantum panic comes from people who don't really understand what these algorithms actually do or what the practical barriers are. Grover's algorithm isn't the Bitcoin killer people imagine it to be.
Look, quantum computing is real and will eventually matter, but the timeline people are worried about? Not realistic. Bitcoin's had years to prepare and the protocol can adapt. Worth keeping an eye on the space, but the doomsday narrative around quantum threats feels overblown.