Here's how bitcoin, Ethereum and other networks are preparing for the looming quantum threat
As quantum computing edges closer to practical reality, the crypto industry is beginning to confront a question it has long deferred: what happens if the cryptography underpinning trillions of dollars in digital assets no longer holds?

Across many of the most well-known ecosystems like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana, responses are diverging along familiar lines: what to do on social consensus and technical iteration, and community members are split between caution and acceleration.
Quantum computing is a fundamentally different approach to computation that uses the principles of quantum mechanics rather than classical physics.
Instead of traditional bits that are either 0 or 1, quantum computers use “qubits,” which can exist in multiple states at once, a property known as superposition, allowing them to process many possibilities simultaneously.
Combined with another feature called entanglement, this enables quantum machines to solve certain complex problems far more efficiently than classical computers, particularly tasks like factoring large numbers that underpin modern encryption.
How threatening is quantum computing?
Consider this: Quantum computers can solve extremely complex problems within seconds, whereas 'Supercomputers,' the most powerful computing machines available today, would take thousands of years for the same problems, according to IBM.
And that's why the threats to cryptographic networks stemming from quantum computing are concerning.

And even Google, developer of Willow, a quantum supercomputer, is setting a 2029 deadline to migrate its authentication services to post-quantum cryptography, citing progress in the technology.
Nowhere is the tension more visible than in Bitcoin.
While the risks posed by quantum computing have been understood since the network’s earliest days, the debate began meaningfully a few years back, when developers started more seriously discussing post-quantum signature schemes and the long-term implications of exposed public keys.
The threat became very real recently, when some Wall Street analysts, such as Jefferies , said investors should drop bitcoin from their portfolios altogether because of the looming risk to the network.
While that has struck a nerve with some investors, others, including Cathie Wood's Ark Invest, came to defend Bitcoin, saying quantum computing is a long-term risk but a risk nonetheless.
For years, these discussions remained largely academic, but as Taproot activated in 2021 and quantum research continued to advance, attention shifted toward practical questions — how to migrate funds, how to handle vulnerable coins, and whether upgrades could be introduced without breaking Bitcoin’s core guarantees.
More recently, that abstract concern has started to crystallize into concrete proposals.



