Timidayor
1.6K posts



You texted me and told me I’ve very pretty and I billed you for my gym premium subscription and you ghosted, it’s okay if you’re struggling as a man but don’t go around admiring women that are not on your level. End.

Your GF in another guy's DM.




Everyone is calling this #Google quantum paper a “#cryptokiller.” That’s not what the research actually says. What Google really revealed is something much more important: 👉 The timeline for #quantumrisk is compressing faster than expected — but the attack surface is very specific. Let’s break it down properly: According to Google’s latest research: • Breaking #Bitcoin/#Ethereum cryptography may require <500,000 physical qubits (not millions) • Practical attack models could use ~1,200–1,450 high-quality qubits • A real-time attack could happen in ~9 minutes, competing with block confirmation time • ~6.9M $BTC are already exposed due to public key visibility That’s a big shift. But here’s where most people completely misunderstand the implication: 1. This is NOT a “break Bitcoin tomorrow” moment Google is not saying: 👉 quantum attacks are imminent They are saying: 👉 the gap between theory and reality is smaller than we thought That’s a *timeline adjustment, not an execution event. 2. The real vulnerability is NOT all wallets The attack model is very specific: 👉 It targets public key exposure during transactions Meaning: • Funds are most vulnerable while moving (in-flight) • Old wallets with reused addresses are at risk • Taproot makes public keys more visible → expands exposure This is a surface-level vulnerability, not total system failure. 3. This changes HOW attacks happen Old assumption: 👉 “Quantum breaks old dormant wallets” Google’s model suggests: 👉 real-time transaction hijacking is more viable That’s a completely different threat model: • Not slow theft • But high-speed interception 4. The biggest signal: migration urgency just moved forward Google even hinted at timelines around ~2029 for useful systems That means: 👉 Crypto doesn’t have decades 👉 It likely has a few years to upgrade properly 5. But here’s the part CT still misses: Crypto is one of the only financial systems that can upgrade itself • Signature schemes can be replaced • Wallets can migrate • Chains can hard/soft fork • PQC (post-quantum cryptography) is already being developed So the real takeaway isn’t fear. It’s this: 👉 We are entering a post-quantum transition cycle Just like: • Internet → HTTPS • Finance → digital security Crypto will move: 👉 from classical cryptography → quantum-resistant systems And from a market perspective — this is where it gets interesting: This creates a new competitive layer: 👉 Which chains upgrade first 👉 Which wallets migrate users fastest 👉 Which infrastructure captures this transition Most people will trade the headline: “Quantum will kill crypto” Smart money will track: 👉 upgrade timelines 👉 exposed supply 👉 protocol adaptability This isn’t the end of crypto. It’s the beginning of a multi-year security upgrade cycle — and one of the most underpriced narratives right now.

















