
Quantum Computing Got 20x Closer. It Threatens A Third of All Bitcoin
Unchained
Intro
Laura Shin opens the episode, introduces the topic and guests, and discloses the sponsor Nexo.
Google just set a deadline. Quantum computers could break Bitcoin's encryption by 2029. Are blockchains ready?
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Google and Oratomic published quantum computing research on the same day, and together they redraw the timeline for when blockchains need to be post-quantum secure.
Google's paper, co-authored by Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake and Stanford cryptographer Dan Boneh, estimates 2029 for breaking the elliptic curve cryptography that protects Bitcoin and Ethereum.
Oratomic's findings are sharper: utility-scale quantum computers may need only 10,000 qubits, not the millions previously assumed, and the company already has 6,000 in the lab.
With 6.7 million BTC in vulnerable addresses and a newly identified 9-minute attack window on unspent Bitcoin transactions, the question is no longer whether blockchains need to migrate. It's whether they can do it fast enough.
Guests:
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Alex Pruden, Co-Founder & CEO, Project Eleven
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Dolev Bluvstein, CEO of Oratomic
Links:
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Unchained:
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Research Papers:
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Google: Securing Elliptic Curve Cryptocurrencies Against Quantum Vulnerabilities
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Oratomic: Shor's Algorithm with as Few as 10,000 Reconfigurable Atomic Qubits (arXiv)
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Caltech: Useful Quantum Computers Could Be Built with as Few as 10,000 Qubits
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Companies & Tools:
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Standards & Infrastructure:
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