
Every time the “quantum will break Bitcoin” topic comes back, I see the same response: “If quantum can break the cryptography Bitcoin relies on, Bitcoin will be the least of your problems.”
There’s some truth to that, but I still think it’s a lazy argument.
Yes, if quantum gets to that point, a lot of things could get chaotic. But people keep ignoring one huge difference: centralized systems can react fast. If there’s an imminent threat, a small group can make a decision in one meeting, start working on it immediately, and push changes much faster.
Bitcoin is not like that.
That’s the tradeoff of decentralization. It has a lot of strengths, but it also has real weaknesses, and one of them is coordination under pressure. In Bitcoin, people first have to agree that there’s even a problem. Then they have to agree on the fix. Then the network actually has to adopt it. If the threat is real and urgent, that delay is a serious vulnerability.
I think the Bitcoin community is acting a little too confident about this topic. I’m not claiming to know enough about quantum computing to say whether this will happen soon, or ever. But one thing seems obvious to me: if this technology becomes real, it probably won’t be developed fully in public, slowly enough for everyone to prepare. It will more likely be developed behind closed doors and show up all at once, at which point it may already be too late.
Bitcoin’s decentralized nature is one of its greatest strengths, but it could also end up being one of its biggest existential weaknesses.
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