Google research suggests encryption technique used by Bitcoin will be cracked by quantum computers around 2029 — search giant says quantum attacks need to be prepared for now

Quantum computer
(Image credit: Getty Images)

It's long been hypothesized, and now broadly accepted, that should practical quantum computers arrive, they could eventually break the conventional cryptography methods that underpin today's digital world. Crucially, they might crack elliptic-curve cryptography (ECC), a principle in use today across many fields. The timeframe for the quantum cryptocalypse was previously believed to lie past 2030, but new research from Google pulls this schedule forward to 2029.

The paper predicts profound effects across blockchain infrastructure and cryptocurrencies, among other applications. The list of blockchains expected to be under fire from the quantum ECC attack is essentially "all of them," as demonstrated by a recent Cambridge study.

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Bruno Ferreira
Contributor

Bruno Ferreira is a contributing writer for Tom's Hardware. He has decades of experience with PC hardware and assorted sundries, alongside a career as a developer. He's obsessed with detail and has a tendency to ramble on the topics he loves. When not doing that, he's usually playing games, or at live music shows and festivals.

  • Zaranthos
    Cryptocurrency was always a bad idea. Lets use vast amounts of compute that require vast amounts of finite energy supply to create fake money with no real value. Years of higher hardware costs, higher energy costs that disproportionately impact the poorest people the worst, with one of the most oppressive governments in the world stealing nearly 7 billion in crypto hacking alone. Despite the hype about it being secure, convenient, anonymous, blah, blah, it was all just a terrible idea in my opinion.
    Reply
  • jp7189
    The theory is alarming, but id like to think the practice is less so. Anyone that can put hands on a quantum computer of this magnitude has an incentive to maintain economic stability. Random destruco hackers arent going to have one of these running in their basement for a long while yet.
    Reply
  • usertests
    jp7189 said:
    The theory is alarming, but id like to think the practice is less so. Anyone that can put hands on a quantum computer of this magnitude has an incentive to maintain economic stability. Random destruco hackers arent going to have one of these running in their basement for a long while yet.
    Either way, we're getting strong hints that a lot of encryption will be toast soon.
    Reply
  • anoldnewb
    Zaranthos said:
    Cryptocurrency was always a bad idea. Lets use vast amounts of compute that require vast amounts of finite energy supply to create fake money with no real value. Years of higher hardware costs, higher energy costs that disproportionately impact the poorest people the worst, with one of the most oppressive governments in the world stealing nearly 7 billion in crypto hacking alone. Despite the hype about it being secure, convenient, anonymous, blah, blah, it was all just a terrible idea in my opinion.
    Vast energy use is only tied to proof-of-work systems like bitcoin where miners validate transactions and are awarded new coins. The mining calculations keep getting more compute intensive to restrict the issuance of new coins.

    proof-of-stake systems (that is, coin staking enables transaction validation) like Ethereum do not require such energy intensive calculations to verify transactions .

    Speculation on Bitcoin and other cryptocurrency which causes unstable values is a whole other issue.
    Reply
  • anoldnewb
    jp7189 said:
    The theory is alarming, but id like to think the practice is less so. Anyone that can put hands on a quantum computer of this magnitude has an incentive to maintain economic stability. Random destruco hackers arent going to have one of these running in their basement for a long while yet.
    Yes this will require state level hackers, for example Russia, China, or North Korea. The rewards are huge, trillions of dollars of crypto, stealing defense technology or breaking into finance systems. It may take them a several more years access leading edge hardware, but the return is almost limitless.
    Reply
  • Blastomonas
    I would imagine that Crypto investors will remove their fortunes when the time is near and then crypto will be over. Assuming that they dont upgrade the encryption in the next couple of years of course..
    Reply