The post Saudi Arabia’s First Quantum Computer: Can It Break Bitcoin? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Saudi Aramco installed the Kingdom’s first quantum computer, built by France-based Pasqal. The 200-qubit system marked Saudi Arabia’s entry into the global quantum race. Experts said current machines cannot yet break Bitcoin’s cryptography, but progress is accelerating. Saudi Arabia has entered the global quantum computing race. Saudi Aramco, the government-controlled energy and chemicals company, said Monday it has installed the Kingdom’s first quantum computer, in a move that adds to mounting security concerns for Bitcoin and other blockchain networks. Aramco said the 200-qubit machine, built by Pasqal, a France-based neutral-atom quantum computing company, and installed at its Dhahran data center, has been designed for industrial applications such as energy modeling and materials research. Pasqal said it is the most powerful system the company has delivered to date. A qubit, or quantum bit, is the basic unit of a quantum computer.  “The deployment of our most powerful quantum computer yet is a piece of history and a landmark for the Middle East’s quantum future,” Pasqal CEO Loïc Henriet said in a statement. “Pasqal continues its expansion, delivering practical quantum power to industry.” Saudi Arabia’s move places it alongside governments in the U.S., China, the EU, the UK, Japan, India, and Canada that have funded national quantum programs intended to expand research infrastructure and train the workforce needed for future fault-tolerant systems. Experts warn that if quantum machines ever become powerful enough, they could reveal private keys or forge signatures, allowing attackers to steal funds or crack privacy mechanisms. But just how real is that threat today? A serious threat or a shot in the dark? Yoon Auh, founder of Bolts Technologies, said rapid progress in quantum computing has forced security communities to take the threat seriously, amid “repeated jumps” in the technology. “With so much effort and money… The post Saudi Arabia’s First Quantum Computer: Can It Break Bitcoin? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Saudi Aramco installed the Kingdom’s first quantum computer, built by France-based Pasqal. The 200-qubit system marked Saudi Arabia’s entry into the global quantum race. Experts said current machines cannot yet break Bitcoin’s cryptography, but progress is accelerating. Saudi Arabia has entered the global quantum computing race. Saudi Aramco, the government-controlled energy and chemicals company, said Monday it has installed the Kingdom’s first quantum computer, in a move that adds to mounting security concerns for Bitcoin and other blockchain networks. Aramco said the 200-qubit machine, built by Pasqal, a France-based neutral-atom quantum computing company, and installed at its Dhahran data center, has been designed for industrial applications such as energy modeling and materials research. Pasqal said it is the most powerful system the company has delivered to date. A qubit, or quantum bit, is the basic unit of a quantum computer.  “The deployment of our most powerful quantum computer yet is a piece of history and a landmark for the Middle East’s quantum future,” Pasqal CEO Loïc Henriet said in a statement. “Pasqal continues its expansion, delivering practical quantum power to industry.” Saudi Arabia’s move places it alongside governments in the U.S., China, the EU, the UK, Japan, India, and Canada that have funded national quantum programs intended to expand research infrastructure and train the workforce needed for future fault-tolerant systems. Experts warn that if quantum machines ever become powerful enough, they could reveal private keys or forge signatures, allowing attackers to steal funds or crack privacy mechanisms. But just how real is that threat today? A serious threat or a shot in the dark? Yoon Auh, founder of Bolts Technologies, said rapid progress in quantum computing has forced security communities to take the threat seriously, amid “repeated jumps” in the technology. “With so much effort and money…

Saudi Arabia’s First Quantum Computer: Can It Break Bitcoin?

In brief

  • Saudi Aramco installed the Kingdom’s first quantum computer, built by France-based Pasqal.
  • The 200-qubit system marked Saudi Arabia’s entry into the global quantum race.
  • Experts said current machines cannot yet break Bitcoin’s cryptography, but progress is accelerating.

Saudi Arabia has entered the global quantum computing race.

Saudi Aramco, the government-controlled energy and chemicals company, said Monday it has installed the Kingdom’s first quantum computer, in a move that adds to mounting security concerns for Bitcoin and other blockchain networks.

Aramco said the 200-qubit machine, built by Pasqal, a France-based neutral-atom quantum computing company, and installed at its Dhahran data center, has been designed for industrial applications such as energy modeling and materials research.

Pasqal said it is the most powerful system the company has delivered to date. A qubit, or quantum bit, is the basic unit of a quantum computer.

“The deployment of our most powerful quantum computer yet is a piece of history and a landmark for the Middle East’s quantum future,” Pasqal CEO Loïc Henriet said in a statement. “Pasqal continues its expansion, delivering practical quantum power to industry.”

Saudi Arabia’s move places it alongside governments in the U.S., China, the EU, the UK, Japan, India, and Canada that have funded national quantum programs intended to expand research infrastructure and train the workforce needed for future fault-tolerant systems.

Experts warn that if quantum machines ever become powerful enough, they could reveal private keys or forge signatures, allowing attackers to steal funds or crack privacy mechanisms. But just how real is that threat today?

A serious threat or a shot in the dark?

Yoon Auh, founder of Bolts Technologies, said rapid progress in quantum computing has forced security communities to take the threat seriously, amid “repeated jumps” in the technology.

“With so much effort and money going into this, breakthroughs are inevitable,” he told Decrypt. “Nobody knows when, but the threat is no longer theoretical. It still can’t break ECC or RSA today, but progress is steady.”

Auh said the motivation for nation-state investment extends beyond cryptanalysis.

“Quantum computing is the first technology that could become a global digital weapon not controlled by any political system,” he said.

Still, the research is some ways off from cracking systems like the one Bitcoin is built on.

According to research scientist Ian MacCormack, a 200-qubit system is small in practical terms, since current machines are limited by noise and short coherence times that restrict how many operations they can run.

“200 qubits is enough to do some interesting experiments and demonstrations, assuming the qubits are high quality, which is hard to do with even that few of them, but nowhere near enough to do error corrected computing of the sort you would need to run Shor’s Algorithm,” he said, referring to the a quantum algorithm for finding the prime factors of an integer.

Progress ahead

In September, researchers at Caltech unveiled a neutral-atom system with 6,000 qubits.

However, even machines of that scale are still used for research, simulations, and algorithm development rather than for attacking cryptography.

“What you need is a very long coherence time compared to the duration of your operations,” Caltech graduate student Elie Bataille told Decrypt. “If your operations are one microsecond and you have a second of coherence time, that means you can do about a million operations.”

Researchers say threatening modern cryptography would require thousands of error-corrected logical qubits, which translates to millions of physical qubits.

Although the Pasqal system did not change current blockchain security, it renewed attention on a long-term risk known as Q-Day, the moment a quantum computer becomes powerful enough to derive a private key from a public key and forge digital signatures.

The concern is that such a capability would not only undermine the cryptography used by Bitcoin but also the many security systems that underpin the global economy.

“What a quantum computer could do, and this is what’s relevant to Bitcoin, is forge the digital signatures Bitcoin uses today,” Justin Thaler, research partner at Andreessen Horowitz and associate professor at Georgetown University, told Decrypt. “Someone with a quantum computer could authorize a transaction, taking all the Bitcoin out of your accounts when you did not authorize it. That’s the worry.”

Today’s early-stage processors, including the 200-qubit Pasqal machine and Google’s 105-qubit Willow chip, remain well below the threshold needed for such attacks.

“Quantum computation has a reasonable probability, more than 5%, of being a major, even existential, long-term risk to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies,” Christopher Peikert, professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Michigan, told Decrypt. “But it’s not a real risk in the next few years; quantum-computing technology still has too far to go before it can threaten modern cryptography.”

Generally Intelligent Newsletter

A weekly AI journey narrated by Gen, a generative AI model.

Source: https://decrypt.co/350045/saudi-arabias-first-quantum-computer-break-bitcoin

Market Opportunity
QUANTUM Logo
QUANTUM Price(QUANTUM)
$0.003474
$0.003474$0.003474
+0.08%
USD
QUANTUM (QUANTUM) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Fed Decides On Interest Rates Today—Here’s What To Watch For

Fed Decides On Interest Rates Today—Here’s What To Watch For

The post Fed Decides On Interest Rates Today—Here’s What To Watch For appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Topline The Federal Reserve on Wednesday will conclude a two-day policymaking meeting and release a decision on whether to lower interest rates—following months of pressure and criticism from President Donald Trump—and potentially signal whether additional cuts are on the way. President Donald Trump has urged the central bank to “CUT INTEREST RATES, NOW, AND BIGGER” than they might plan to. Getty Images Key Facts The central bank is poised to cut interest rates by at least a quarter-point, down from the 4.25% to 4.5% range where they have been held since December to between 4% and 4.25%, as Wall Street has placed 100% odds of a rate cut, according to CME’s FedWatch, with higher odds (94%) on a quarter-point cut than a half-point (6%) reduction. Fed governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, both Trump appointees, voted in July for a quarter-point reduction to rates, and they may dissent again in favor of a large cut alongside Stephen Miran, Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers’ chair, who was sworn in at the meeting’s start on Tuesday. It’s unclear whether other policymakers, including Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid and St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem, will favor larger cuts or opt for no reduction. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in his Jackson Hole, Wyoming, address last month the central bank would likely consider a looser monetary policy, noting the “shifting balance of risks” on the U.S. economy “may warrant adjusting our policy stance.” David Mericle, an economist for Goldman Sachs, wrote in a note the “key question” for the Fed’s meeting is whether policymakers signal “this is likely the first in a series of consecutive cuts” as the central bank is anticipated to “acknowledge the softening in the labor market,” though they may not “nod to an October cut.” Mericle said he…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:23
Markets await Fed’s first 2025 cut, experts bet “this bull market is not even close to over”

Markets await Fed’s first 2025 cut, experts bet “this bull market is not even close to over”

Will the Fed’s first rate cut of 2025 fuel another leg higher for Bitcoin and equities, or does September’s history point to caution? First rate cut of 2025 set against a fragile backdrop The Federal Reserve is widely expected to…
Share
Crypto.news2025/09/18 00:27
Sharon AI Signs Definitive and Binding Buy-Out Agreement to Divest and Closes its Divestiture of its 50% Ownership Interest in Texas Critical Data Centers LLC For US$70m

Sharon AI Signs Definitive and Binding Buy-Out Agreement to Divest and Closes its Divestiture of its 50% Ownership Interest in Texas Critical Data Centers LLC For US$70m

NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–SharonAI Holdings Inc. and its subsidiaries (“Sharon AI”), a leading Australian Neocloud (SHAZ:OTC Markets, SHAZW:OTC Markets), today announced
Share
AI Journal2026/01/19 04:15