Expert Answer

Is My Crypto Safe From Quantum Attacks?

Short Answer: If you hold Bitcoin, Ethereum, or any cryptocurrency using ECDSA or RSA encryption, your assets are not safe from future quantum attacks. Shor's algorithm will be able to derive private keys from public keys once quantum computers reach approximately 4,000 logical qubits, expected between 2030-2035.

Assessing Your Quantum Risk

Your crypto's quantum safety depends entirely on the cryptography it uses. Here is a clear breakdown of which assets are vulnerable and which are not.

Vulnerable: ECDSA-Based Cryptocurrencies

Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, Cardano, Avalanche, Polygon, and the vast majority of cryptocurrencies use elliptic curve digital signature algorithm (ECDSA) on curves like secp256k1 or Ed25519. Shor's algorithm on a quantum computer can break all of these. If you hold any of these tokens, your assets are quantum-vulnerable.

How the Attack Would Work

Every time you send a transaction, your public key is broadcast to the blockchain and stored permanently. A quantum computer running Shor's algorithm can mathematically derive your private key from that public key. With your private key, an attacker controls your wallet — they can transfer all your funds.

For Bitcoin specifically, approximately 25% of all BTC (worth hundreds of billions) sits in addresses with exposed public keys from early transactions when Pay-to-Public-Key (P2PK) was the standard format.

The Harvest Now, Decrypt Later Risk

Even if quantum computers do not exist yet, state-level adversaries are collecting encrypted blockchain data today. When quantum computers arrive, they can retroactively crack every historical transaction. Your past transactions are a future vulnerability.

What About Ethereum 2.0?

Ethereum's roadmap includes a vague mention of "quantum resistance" as a long-term goal, but there is no concrete implementation timeline. Vitalik Buterin has acknowledged the threat but has not committed to a specific post-quantum migration plan. Waiting for Ethereum to upgrade is a gamble.

The Safe Option: Quantum-Resistant Tokens

BMIC uses CRYSTALS-Kyber lattice-based encryption — the NIST-standardized post-quantum algorithm (FIPS 203). This means BMIC wallets, transactions, and staking contracts are protected against both classical and quantum attacks. The security is built into the protocol from the foundation, not bolted on later.

Related Questions

Is my Bitcoin safe from quantum computers?

No. Bitcoin uses ECDSA on secp256k1, which Shor's algorithm can break. Approximately 25% of all BTC is in addresses with exposed public keys, making it immediately vulnerable when quantum computers reach sufficient scale.

Is Ethereum safe from quantum attacks?

No. Ethereum uses the same ECDSA cryptography as Bitcoin. Ethereum's roadmap mentions quantum resistance as a long-term goal but has no concrete implementation timeline.

Which crypto is actually safe from quantum?

BMIC is the first cryptocurrency using NIST-standard CRYSTALS-Kyber encryption at the protocol level. It is designed from the ground up to be quantum-resistant.

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