Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy Digital, confirmed in an interview with Coindesk, that the long-term cryptographic challenge for Bitcoin is real and thatAlex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy Digital, confirmed in an interview with Coindesk, that the long-term cryptographic challenge for Bitcoin is real and that

Galaxy Digital Says Quantum Computing Is Not an Immediate Bitcoin Threat But the Clock Is Running

2026/03/19 21:49
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Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy Digital, confirmed in an interview with Coindesk, that the long-term cryptographic challenge for Bitcoin is real and that preparation needs to begin before the hardware catches up.

What the Report Actually Says

Thorn’s central argument is about timing. A quantum computer capable of cracking Bitcoin’s Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm is still years away, and potentially a decade or more. Current quantum hardware does not possess the logical qubits required for that level of computation. The gap between where quantum hardware is today and where it needs to be to threaten Bitcoin’s cryptography remains significant.

That does not mean the threat is theoretical. It means it is not imminent. The distinction matters for how the market and developers should be prioritizing their response.

Which Bitcoin Addresses Are Actually at Risk

The report identifies a specific vulnerability rather than a general one. Reused addresses and unspent transaction outputs from the early Satoshi era are the most exposed. Those addresses use public keys directly, meaning the key is visible on-chain and available for a sufficiently powerful quantum computer to work against.

Modern P2PKH addresses, which stand for Pay-to-Public-Key-Hash, carry a different risk profile. The public key is hidden behind a cryptographic hash until a transaction is broadcast. That adds a layer of protection because the public key is only exposed at the moment of spending. An attacker would need to break the hash and derive the private key faster than the transaction confirms, a meaningfully higher bar than attacking a static exposed public key.

The practical implication is that the quantum risk is not evenly distributed across Bitcoin’s address space. Early Satoshi-era UTXOs represent the most concentrated vulnerability. Whether those coins could or would be moved to quantum-resistant addresses before a capable quantum computer exists is an open question.

What Developers Are Already Doing

Galaxy’s report highlights that Bitcoin developers are not waiting. Post-Quantum Cryptography research is already underway within the developer community. The Taproot upgrade, which activated in 2021, laid technical groundwork for more complex script types that could eventually support quantum-resistant signature schemes such as Lamport or Winternitz signatures.

The likely upgrade path, according to the report, involves a soft fork where users migrate funds to new quantum-secure address types. Thorn draws a direct analogy to the transition from Legacy to SegWit addresses. That transition took years and was not universally adopted, but it proceeded without breaking the network. A post-quantum migration would follow similar mechanics, though at higher stakes.

Bitcoin’s upgrade process is deliberately slow and conservative. That is both a security feature and a constraint. Ethereum’s more aggressive quantum-safe roadmap, led by Vitalik Buterin, may function as an industry testing ground for post-quantum cryptographic approaches before Bitcoin adopts them.

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The Harvest Now, Decrypt Later Problem

The most underappreciated risk Thorn identifies is not a direct attack on Bitcoin’s network. It is state-level actors archiving currently encrypted traffic with the intention of decrypting it once quantum capability matures. That threat is more relevant to private communications and sensitive data than to public ledger balances, but it underscores that the timeline for quantum readiness cannot be set by when the threat becomes obvious.

By the time a quantum computer capable of threatening Bitcoin’s cryptography is publicly known to exist, the preparation window may already have closed for the most vulnerable address types.

The Market Is Not Pricing the Risk

Bitcoin trades near $70,000 with institutional investors showing little visible concern about quantum threats despite recent advances in error correction from IBM and Google. That calm is consistent with Thorn’s assessment that no immediate crisis exists. It also reflects a market that has historically priced near-term catalysts rather than decade-horizon technical risks.

Galaxy’s conclusion is measured. The threat is real but manageable. The transition is achievable if it begins before the hardware forces it. That is a different statement from saying the problem is solved.

The post Galaxy Digital Says Quantum Computing Is Not an Immediate Bitcoin Threat But the Clock Is Running appeared first on ETHNews.

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