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Just saw something that should probably worry a lot of people holding crypto. Researchers from Caltech and quantum startup Oratomic dropped a paper showing that quantum computers might not need nearly as many qubits as we thought to crack your wallet security.
Here's the thing - they're saying around 10,000 physical qubits could theoretically break the cryptography protecting Bitcoin and Ethereum. That's way lower than earlier estimates which were talking hundreds of thousands. For context, a neutral-atom quantum computer with roughly 26,000 qubits could potentially crack ECC-256 (the encryption standard securing major blockchains) in about 10 days. RSA-2048, which banks use for Web2 security, would need closer to 102,000 qubits and around three months.
The math is getting brutal. Shor's algorithm requirements have dropped five orders of magnitude over two decades - from about 1 billion qubits back in 2012 down to 10,000 now. That's not a small shift.
What makes this real is the timeline. If these assumptions hold, someone with a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could derive private keys and basically drain wallets. There's an estimated 6.9 million BTC sitting in early wallets and reused addresses that would be particularly vulnerable. The rapid "on-spend" attack scenario (where a quantum computer cracks a key in minutes to front-run a transaction) seems less likely based on this 10-day window, but long-term sitting funds are another story.
I should mention - all nine authors are shareholders in Oratomic, so there's definitely a conflict of interest angle here. That said, the direction is becoming harder to dismiss. The real question now isn't whether quantum systems can break crypto encryption. It's whether the industry can migrate to quantum-resistant systems before the cost of launching quantum attacks drops even further. Can crypto actually move fast enough? That's the actual race happening right now.
Current prices sitting around BTC $72.74K and ETH $2.24K if anyone's checking. Worth thinking about what quantum-resistant alternatives might look like when this becomes less theoretical.