Bernstein Analysts Allay Bitcoin Fears, Why Quantum Is Not As Big A Threat As You Think

bitcoinist2026-04-11 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-04-11 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

Bernstein analysts address rising concerns about quantum computing's threat to Bitcoin, arguing it is a manageable long-term upgrade rather than an existential risk. While Google researchers recently found that breaking Bitcoin's elliptic curve cryptography may require as few as 500,000 qubits—far fewer than previous estimates—Bernstein emphasizes the industry has a three- to five-year window to adapt. They note the vulnerability primarily affects older wallets with exposed or reused public keys, not Bitcoin's SHA-256 mining process. The report aligns with Google's own 2029 migration timeline, suggesting sufficient time to transition to quantum-resistant cryptography.

Analysts at investment research firm Bernstein are pushing back against growing fears that quantum computing poses an existential danger to Bitcoin.

Concerns about quantum computing breaking Bitcoin’s cryptography have grown following recent findings from Google researchers. Bernstein analysts, however, say the quantum threat is only a technical challenge that the network can adapt to over time.

Bernstein Analysts Dispel The Bitcoin Quantum Threat

Google’s research team recently established that breaking the elliptic curve cryptography protecting Bitcoin and other crypto transactions could be achieved with far fewer resources than estimated.

According to research findings by Google published in a recent whitepaper, a quantum machine running fewer than 500,000 physical qubits could be able to break Bitcoin’s cryptography in the near future, down from earlier estimates of around 10 million.

Google also warned of on-spend attacks, where a sufficiently fast quantum computer could derive a private key from an exposed public key within Bitcoin’s average 10-minute block confirmation window, giving an attacker a roughly 41% chance of redirecting funds before a transaction settles.

However, analysts at Bernstein are taking a more measured view by describing quantum computing as a manageable upgrade cycle for Bitcoin. In a recent note to clients, Bernstein analysts led by Gautam Chhugani said that the network has enough time to respond before the threat becomes practical, while also providing estimates that point to a multi-year window for preparation.

The firm estimates Bitcoin and the broader crypto industry have a three- to five-year runway before quantum computers reach the scale required to mount real attacks.

Interestingly, this timeline aligns with Google’s own 2029 migration benchmark, cited in the same whitepaper. Google had acknowledged in its paper that the time remaining before cryptographically relevant quantum computers arrive still exceeds the time needed to complete a migration to post-quantum cryptography capable of protecting against these threats.

“We think that the quantum should be seen as a medium to long term system upgrade cycle rather than a risk,” the note said.

Vulnerability Is Narrower Than It Appears

The paper by Google’s research team took the crypto industry by surprise, and rightly so. The entire Bitcoin network and crypto industry by extension is built on the premise of blockchain security. Therefore, the possibility that computers that can threaten this security can be built by the end of the decade is a threat to the future of the entire industry.

Interestingly, the Bernstein note also pointed out that the risk is not evenly distributed across the Bitcoin network. The primary exposure lies in wallet-level cryptography, particularly in older Satoshi-era legacy wallet addresses that have revealed their public keys or reused them multiple times.

Bitcoin’s mining process, which relies on SHA-256 hashing, is not considered meaningfully threatened by quantum advances in the same way.

The cryptocurrency industry is also now in a place where many institutional players like Circle, Strategy, BlackRock, and Fidelity are likely to play a constructive role in mitigating any quantum computing threat.

BTC trading at $71,811 on the 1D chart | Source: BTCUSDT on Tradingview.com

İlgili Sorular

QWhat is the main argument made by Bernstein analysts regarding the threat of quantum computing to Bitcoin?

ABernstein analysts argue that quantum computing is not an existential threat to Bitcoin, but rather a manageable technical challenge that the network can adapt to over time through a system upgrade cycle.

QAccording to Google's research, how many physical qubits might be needed to break Bitcoin's cryptography in the near future?

AGoogle's research suggests that a quantum machine running fewer than 500,000 physical qubits could break Bitcoin's cryptography, which is significantly lower than earlier estimates of around 10 million.

QWhat specific type of attack did Google warn about regarding quantum computing and Bitcoin transactions?

AGoogle warned about 'on-spend attacks,' where a sufficiently fast quantum computer could derive a private key from an exposed public key within Bitcoin's average 10-minute block confirmation window, giving an attacker a roughly 41% chance of redirecting funds before a transaction settles.

QWhat timeframe do Bernstein analysts estimate for the crypto industry to prepare for quantum computing threats?

ABernstein analysts estimate that Bitcoin and the broader crypto industry have a three- to five-year runway before quantum computers reach the scale required to mount real attacks.

QWhich part of the Bitcoin ecosystem is most vulnerable to quantum computing attacks according to the Bernstein note?

AThe primary exposure lies in wallet-level cryptography, particularly in older Satoshi-era legacy wallet addresses that have revealed their public keys or reused them multiple times. Bitcoin's mining process (SHA-256 hashing) is not considered meaningfully threatened.

İlgili Okumalar

Valuation of $852 Billion, CEO Holds Zero Shares, Shareholders in a Power Struggle: Who Controls OpenAI?

OpenAI, valued at $852 billion after a $122 billion funding round, is navigating immense opportunities and challenges. CEO Sam Altman holds zero equity, earning a minimal salary, which has raised governance concerns, notably during his brief 2023 ouster. Major investors include Microsoft (26.79%), OpenAI Foundation (25.8%), SoftBank (11.66%), Amazon (4.66%), and NVIDIA (3.47%). Their investments are often strategic, aimed at securing AI infrastructure advantages rather than purely financial returns. The company recently transitioned from a non-profit to a for-profit structure, with the OpenAI Foundation retaining significant control. However, oversight concerns persist as board members overlap between the two entities. Internally, tensions exist between Altman, who pushes for a potential IPO as early as Q4 2025, and the CFO, who cautions against rushing due to operational and financial risks. Financially, OpenAI reports $20 billion in monthly revenue (annualized $250 billion) but expects $140 billion in losses this year and $600 billion in compute investments over five years. Its high valuation—34x sales—reflects a bet on achieving AGI, as competition with rivals like Anthropic intensifies. The funding landscape highlights a divide: U.S. tech giants invest via corporate strategic deals, while Chinese AI firms rely on traditional VC funding, creating a significant capital gap. The ultimate question remains whether OpenAI’s vision justifies its historic valuation.

marsbit1 saat önce

Valuation of $852 Billion, CEO Holds Zero Shares, Shareholders in a Power Struggle: Who Controls OpenAI?

marsbit1 saat önce

Edge AI Daily Morning Report (April 12)

Edge AI Daily Brief (April 12) **Silicon Valley Front:** CoreWeave expanded partnerships with Meta and Anthropic, reflecting surging AI compute demand. Major cloud providers in China raised prices by 5%-30% due to soaring GPU costs and a 1000x increase in daily token usage since 2024. Anthropic, with annualized revenue exceeding $30B, is exploring in-house chip development to address shortages and signed a 3.5GW TPU deal with Google and Broadcom. The U.S. MATCH Act tightened semiconductor export controls, lowering technology thresholds and threatening global supply chains. ASML and Tokyo Electron saw stock declines. OpenAI addressed a third-party Axios library security issue, requiring macOS app updates. Microsoft restructured Windows Insider channels to simplify testing. Meta, Amazon, and Google invested in small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) to power energy-intensive AI data centers. Mozilla criticized Microsoft for forcing Copilot integration in Windows 11, highlighting broader concerns about user choice and DMA compliance. Microsoft paused new carbon credit purchases due to quality concerns. **Domestic Progress:** MUJI’s Q2 revenue grew 14.8%, while Amazon launched a global smart hub in Shenzhen to streamline cross-border logistics for Chinese sellers, cutting delivery times by up to 7 days. **Open Source Trends:** Meta AI and KAIST proposed "Neural Computers" (NCs), merging computation and memory into learning runtime states. Agent AI is shifting from prediction to world-state modeling, driving edge infrastructure redesign. Quantum computing demonstrated exponential advantages in classical data processing, using under 60 logical qubits to outperform classical machines. France began migrating government systems to Linux to enhance digital sovereignty and reduce U.S. tech reliance. (Source: Edge AI Daily, Guangjiao Guancha)

marsbit1 saat önce

Edge AI Daily Morning Report (April 12)

marsbit1 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片