CryptoMediaClub
Saturday, April 25, 2026
  • All news
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Altcoins
  • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • Analysis
No Result
View All Result
  • All news
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Altcoins
  • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • Analysis
No Result
View All Result
CryptoMediaClub
No Result
View All Result
Home Analysis

Latest “quantum computer breaks the math behind Bitcoin” headlines massively exaggerate risk

25.04.2026
A A
0
121
VIEWS
ShareShare

On Apr. 24, Project Eleven awarded its Q-Day Prize to Giancarlo Lelli, a researcher who used publicly accessible quantum hardware to derive a 15-bit elliptic curve private key from its public key.

This is the largest public demonstration to date of the attack class that could one day threaten Bitcoin, Ethereum, and every other system secured by elliptic curve cryptography. The prize was one Bitcoin.

The irony is that a researcher won Bitcoin by breaking a miniature version of the math that protects Bitcoin.

A 15-bit key is nowhere near the security of Bitcoin's 256-bit elliptic curve, and no publicly known quantum computer can break real Bitcoin wallets today.

The result arrives at a moment when the surrounding context has gotten considerably more serious, with Google cutting its ECDLP-256 resource estimates and setting a 2029 migration deadline in the same month.

What Lelli actually did

Lelli used a variant of Shor's algorithm, a quantum algorithm targeting the elliptic-curve discrete logarithm problem, the mathematical foundation of Bitcoin's signature scheme, to recover a private key from a public key over a search space of 32,767.

The Q-Day Prize competition asked entrants to break the largest possible ECC key on a quantum computer, with no classical shortcuts or hybrid tricks.

Lelli's 15-bit result was the highest any entrant reached by the deadline, and Project Eleven described it as a 512x jump over Steve Tippeconnic's 6-bit September 2025 demonstration.

The winning machine had roughly 70 qubits, per Decrypt's reporting, and an independent panel including researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and qBraid reviewed the submission, according to Project Eleven.

The right frame for this result is a toy lock picked using the same family of methods that would one day threaten the vault. The locksmiths improved, and the vault holds for now.

Claim What the article supports Why it matters
A quantum computer broke a 15-bit ECC key Project Eleven says Giancarlo Lelli derived a 15-bit elliptic curve private key from its public key using publicly accessible quantum hardware It turns the quantum threat into a concrete public demonstration rather than a purely theoretical warning
Bitcoin itself was not hacked The article explicitly says no publicly known quantum computer can break real Bitcoin wallets today This keeps the piece credible and avoids overstating the result
The result used the same attack family relevant to Bitcoin Lelli used a variant of Shor’s algorithm targeting the elliptic-curve discrete logarithm problem, which underlies Bitcoin’s signature scheme It connects the toy demo to the real cryptographic risk without claiming equivalence
The demo was done under constrained rules The Q-Day Prize required entrants to break the largest possible ECC key on a quantum computer with no classical shortcuts or hybrid tricks It strengthens the significance of the result as a quantum benchmark
The result is larger than prior public ECC demonstrations Project Eleven described the 15-bit result as a 512x jump over Steve Tippeconnic’s 6-bit September 2025 demonstration It shows the public demo frontier is advancing
The gap to Bitcoin’s 256-bit security remains enormous The article notes that a 15-bit key is nowhere near Bitcoin’s 256-bit elliptic curve security This is the central caveat readers need in order to interpret the story correctly
The hardware was still small by real-attack standards The winning machine reportedly had roughly 70 qubits It underlines that the achievement is meaningful as a milestone, not as proof that full-scale attacks are imminent
The real story is directional, not catastrophic Public demos are getting bigger, resource estimates are falling, and migration deadlines now have concrete dates The threat is still future tense, but the timeline is getting harder to dismiss

The reason this demo lands with more weight than it would have six months ago is Google.

On Mar. 31, Google published new ECDLP-256 resource estimates for circuits using fewer than 1,200 logical qubits and 90 million Toffoli gates, or fewer than 1,450 logical qubits and 70 million Toffoli gates.

Google estimated those circuits could execute on a superconducting cryptographically relevant quantum computer with fewer than 500,000 physical qubits, roughly a 20-fold reduction from prior estimates.

On Mar. 25, Google set a 2029 target for its own post-quantum cryptography migration, tying the deadline explicitly to progress in hardware, error correction, and resource estimates.

Cloudflare matched that 2029 target on Apr. 7, citing both the Google paper and a Caltech/Oratomic preprint as reasons for acceleration.

That preprint argued that neutral-atom architectures could run Shor's algorithm at cryptographically relevant scales with as few as 10,000 reconfigurable atomic qubits.

Commenting on Apr. 9, QuTech noted that at 10,000 qubits, the architecture would still require nearly three years to break a single ECC-256 key, while the more time-efficient 26,000-qubit configuration would bring the runtime to roughly 10 days.

Both estimates depend on machines that do not yet exist, and the Caltech/Oratomic work is an unreviewed preprint.

The useful takeaway from those numbers is that some theoretical architectures now place the long-term hardware requirement far below what researchers assumed a year ago.

The clocks for public demonstrations are getting shorter, resource estimates are falling, and migration timelines now carry concrete dates.

Quantum computing recent advancements and how they relate to Bitcoin
A timeline graphic charts five milestones from Mar. 25 to Apr. 24, showing how Google, Cloudflare, QuTech, and Project Eleven compressed Bitcoin's quantum risk timeline.

Bitcoin wallets are already exposed

Project Eleven's live tracker currently lists 6,934,064 BTC as vulnerable to a quantum attack.

The vulnerability is that quantum attacks are most dangerous when a public key is already visible on-chain, which happens with older address types, reused addresses, and partial spends.

Some Bitcoin wallets have already exposed their public keys through prior transactions. Google's Mar. 31 paper sharpened that picture, noting that fast-clock cryptographically relevant quantum computers could enable on-spend attacks on public mempool transactions, extending the risk from dormant old wallets to live spending.

Bitcoin's governance has begun to respond with BIP 360, which proposes a new output type removing Taproot's quantum-vulnerable key-path spend. BIP 361 proposes a phased sunset of legacy signatures that would push quantum-vulnerable outputs toward migration.

Their existence confirms that Bitcoin has entered the migration phase. The harder problem ahead is if a decentralized network can align on incentives, timetables, and the treatment of dormant or lost coins before urgency outruns coordination.

Two paths forward

In the bull case, migration becomes routine before any emergency arrives.

Google's and Cloudflare's 2029 targets reset expectations across the industry, wallet providers and exchanges push users away from long-exposure address patterns, and Bitcoin governance coalesces around output changes before any real cryptographically relevant quantum computer materializes.

Q-Day stays future tense, and the most vulnerable stock of BTC tied to exposed public keys shrinks as hardware catches up.

In the bear case, the attack path keeps looking more like engineering than science fiction, outpacing governance's response.

More public key break demonstrations arrive, architecture-specific estimates fall again, and the market starts repricing vulnerable UTXOs and long-idle coins.

The damage in this scenario begins with the erosion of confidence, governance conflict, and rushed migration planning under the clock. A decentralized network with no central authority to mandate deadlines faces the hardest version of that race.

Scenario What changes What stays vulnerable Market / governance implication
Bull case Migration becomes routine before any emergency arrives; wallet providers, exchanges, and protocol developers begin reducing public-key exposure Older address types, reused addresses, and some dormant wallets still carry risk until fully migrated Confidence holds because the ecosystem treats quantum risk as an infrastructure upgrade rather than a crisis
Bear case Public key-break demonstrations keep improving and hardware/resource estimates keep falling faster than governance adapts Exposed public keys, long-idle coins, partial spends, and live-spend transactions remain exposed for longer Markets begin repricing vulnerable UTXOs, governance conflict intensifies, and migration happens under pressure
What reduces risk fastest Better wallet hygiene, fewer reused addresses, reduced public-key exposure, adoption of new output types, and phased retirement of legacy signatures Coordination problems remain, especially around lost coins and slow-moving users The network buys time and lowers the number of coins exposed before cryptographically relevant quantum machines exist
What raises urgency fastest Larger public demos, lower hardware estimates, faster-clock architectures, and stronger evidence that on-spend or mempool attacks could become practical Any wallet whose public key is already visible becomes more sensitive to future advances The debate shifts from “should we prepare?” to “how fast can Bitcoin coordinate?”
Key external deadlines Google and Cloudflare target 2029; the UK’s NCSC sets milestones at 2028, 2031, and 2035 Decentralized crypto networks cannot move as quickly as centralized firms by default Bitcoin faces a harder version of the migration race because it depends on distributed coordination rather than a single authority
Bottom-line consequence In the best case, Q-Day stays future tense long enough for migration to get ahead of the threat In the worst case, technical progress outpaces social and governance response The real risk is not only eventual key-breaking power, but whether the ecosystem can align before urgency outruns coordination

The UK's National Cyber Security Center has set migration milestones at 2028, 2031, and 2035. Google and Cloudflare both target 2029.

The Ethereum Foundation says migrating a global decentralized protocol takes years and must begin before the threat arrives.

Bitcoin's quantum threat now lives in public demonstrations, corporate migration calendars, and draft protocol proposals.

The post Latest “quantum computer breaks the math behind Bitcoin” headlines massively exaggerate risk appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Share9Tweet6ShareSharePin2

Related Posts

UK police raids on people trading crypto for cash raises a hard question about financial freedom
Analysis

UK police raids on people trading crypto for cash raises a hard question about financial freedom

25.04.2026
0

UK authorities have carried out their first coordinated operation against suspected illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading, sending a clear and simple...

Read moreDetails
Ethereum’s 4 consecutive weeks of price rallies fuel bullish bets of $3200

Ethereum’s 4 consecutive weeks of price rallies fuel bullish bets of $3200

24.04.2026
Bitcoin is showing resilience above $78,000 after Trump’s new rhetoric sends oil price back above $100

Bitcoin is showing resilience above $78,000 after Trump’s new rhetoric sends oil price back above $100

24.04.2026
Bitcoin’s 38% plunge just revealed who has paper hands — and it wasn’t ETF buyers

Bitcoin’s 38% plunge just revealed who has paper hands — and it wasn’t ETF buyers

24.04.2026
Bitcoin’s $3.8 billion recovery in 2026 hits crossroads with the path to $150,000 still open

Bitcoin’s $3.8 billion recovery in 2026 hits crossroads with the path to $150,000 still open

24.04.2026
Load More
Next Post
UK police raids on people trading crypto for cash raises a hard question about financial freedom

UK police raids on people trading crypto for cash raises a hard question about financial freedom

0 0 votes
Рейтинг статьи
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
guest
0 комментариев
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Recommended

XRP briefly hits $50 on Gemini as users suspect relisting ‘price glitch’

XRP briefly hits $50 on Gemini as users suspect relisting ‘price glitch’

3 years ago
Bitcoin Price Prediction as Spot ETFs Witness $237 Million Outflow – New Bear Market Starting

Bitcoin Price Prediction as Spot ETFs Witness $237 Million Outflow – New Bear Market Starting

2 years ago
Bitcoin Transaction Fee: Astonishing 1 BTC Paid in Single Transaction

Bitcoin Transaction Fee: Astonishing 1 BTC Paid in Single Transaction

11 months ago
Cardano Founder Claims ADA More Decentralized Than Other Crypto

Cardano Founder Claims ADA More Decentralized Than Other Crypto

3 years ago

Categories

  • All news
  • Altcoins
  • Analysis
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • NFT
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

Trump Just Confirmed He Will Speak at the TRUMP Memecoin Gala: Will His Words Move the Crypto Market?

Tom Lee Just Backed a $250,000 Ethereum Price Target: Is It Actually Possible?

Ethereum’s 4 consecutive weeks of price rallies fuel bullish bets of $3200

Bitget Launches Pre-IPO Token Trading Starting With SpaceX on Solana

Bitcoin is showing resilience above $78,000 after Trump’s new rhetoric sends oil price back above $100

Binance AI Wallet Unveiled: Keyless ‘Agentic Wallet’ for Web3 Automation

Trending

UK police raids on people trading crypto for cash raises a hard question about financial freedom
Analysis

UK police raids on people trading crypto for cash raises a hard question about financial freedom

25.04.2026
0

UK authorities have carried out their first coordinated operation against suspected illegal peer-to-peer crypto trading, sending a...

Latest “quantum computer breaks the math behind Bitcoin” headlines massively exaggerate risk

Latest “quantum computer breaks the math behind Bitcoin” headlines massively exaggerate risk

25.04.2026
Bitcoin Price Prediction: $50K Warns Analyst, Data Points $80K

Bitcoin Price Prediction: $50K Warns Analyst, Data Points $80K

25.04.2026
Trump Just Confirmed He Will Speak at the TRUMP Memecoin Gala: Will His Words Move the Crypto Market?

Trump Just Confirmed He Will Speak at the TRUMP Memecoin Gala: Will His Words Move the Crypto Market?

25.04.2026
Tom Lee Just Backed a $250,000 Ethereum Price Target: Is It Actually Possible?

Tom Lee Just Backed a $250,000 Ethereum Price Target: Is It Actually Possible?

25.04.2026
  • All news
  • Altcoins
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Ethereum
  • NFT
  • Analysis
Editor: cryptomediaclub.com@gmail.com
Advertising: digestmediaholding@gmail.com

Disclaimer: Information found on CryptoMediaClub is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of CryptoMediaClub on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
CryptoMediaClub covers fintech, blockchain and Bitcoin bringing you the latest crypto news and analyses on the future of money.

© 2023 Crypto News. All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • All news
  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum
  • Altcoins
  • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • Analysis

Disclaimer: Information found on CryptoMediaClub is those of writers quoted. It does not represent the opinions of CryptoMediaClub on whether to sell, buy or hold any investments. You are advised to conduct your own research before making any investment decisions. Use provided information at your own risk.
CryptoMediaClub covers fintech, blockchain and Bitcoin bringing you the latest crypto news and analyses on the future of money.

© 2023 Crypto News. All Rights Reserved

wpDiscuz