BTC developers are discussing a potential Bitcoin hard fork to restrict spending from legacy wallets. These Bitcoin wallets are exposed to future quantum computing attacks.
Developers are weighing whether Bitcoin’s protocol needs changes to protect funds held in early address formats. The debate centers on the risk that future quantum computers could derive private keys from exposed public keys and access those coins.
Bitcoin hard fork discussion follows concerns that a large portion of dormant BTC remains stored in early pay-to-public-key (P2PK) addresses.
These addresses reveal the public key. This made them theoretically vulnerable to quantum-based cryptographic attacks if sufficiently advanced systems are developed.
Blockstream co-founder and Bitcoin core developer Matt Corallo suggested that a network split could ultimately determine the outcome.
Meaning, one version of Bitcoin would disable spending from vulnerable addresses. At the same time, another would preserve the current rules. Corallo indicated that market participants would likely decide which chain prevails based on supply dynamics and security considerations.
About 1.72 million BTC mined in Bitcoin’s early years sit in quantum-vulnerable addresses. These coins have stayed untouched for at least 15 years.
Between 1.1 million and 2.1 million BTC were estimated by Chainalysis to be permanently lost. A portion was reported to be held in addresses where public keys are exposed. These coins were considered vulnerable to future quantum attacks.
The only complete safeguard against quantum risk was noted by developers to require private key holders to move funds. Those funds would need to be placed into upgraded address formats. Post-quantum signature schemes were identified as the essential protection.
However, coins whose owners have lost access would remain in exposed addresses. As a result, even after new cryptographic standards are introduced, a percentage of the total supply could remain technically vulnerable.
Bitcoin developers are considering several proposals. One option would block users from sending Bitcoin to quantum-vulnerable addresses after a set deadline. Later, all coins in already exposed addresses would become unspendable.
However, some are against the decision to freeze the money based on the idea of free ownership of Bitcoin.
Other suggestions include restricting the rate at which quantum-recovered coins may come into circulation. Still, others suggest that the market should decide what would happen in case such coins are accessed.
Developers have suggested that if consensus cannot be reached, a hard fork could occur, creating two versions of the network.
In this case, one version freezes vulnerable coins, and the other one keeps them transferable. Market participants would then determine which chain retains economic dominance.
The recovery mechanisms based on zero-knowledge proofs could enable owners to prove their command of seed phrases without disclosing them.
Still, such systems would require additional protocol changes. Also, it may not apply to the earliest addresses created before seed phrase wallets became standard.
Goldman Sachs Chief Executive David Solomon said markets may take several weeks to reflect the effects of the U.S.-Iran conflict. He emphasized that investors will gradually absorb the implications over time.
Speaking at a business summit in Sydney, he described recent market reactions as relatively restrained given the scale of events.
Goldman Sachs Chief Executive David Solomon | Source: Reuters
He noted that financial markets often respond cautiously to geopolitical tensions. Such caution was observed unless there was a direct effect on economic growth. Oil prices have risen amid supply concerns, while global equities have experienced declines.
Additionally, the U.S. dollar has strengthened as investors shifted toward traditional safe-haven assets. Goldman Sachs CEO added that geopolitical developments often influence markets gradually unless economic growth is directly affected.
Meanwhile, Bitcoin price rallied more than 7% in 24 hours to around $73,600, even as the Iran war kept global markets on edge. The rebound came despite bearish predictions and earlier risk-off sentiment tied to the conflict.
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