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ETH $2,219.35 -3.38%
BNB $672.12 -1.36%
XRP $1.43 -4.36%
SOL $89.16 -3.92%
TRX $0.3517 -0.46%
DOGE $0.1135 -2.54%
ADA $0.2611 -4.24%
BCH $425.00 -2.92%
LINK $10.06 -4.81%
HYPE $44.07 +0.14%
AAVE $92.67 -6.82%
SUI $1.09 -8.89%
XLM $0.1543 -5.81%
ZEC $515.96 -8.54%

Bitcoin core developer: Better to freeze 5.6 million BTC than to fall into the hands of quantum hackers

2026-04-16 00:16:50
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Bitcoin core developer Jameson Lopp stated that, compared to the potential quantum computing attacks that may arise in the future, he prefers to "freeze" about 5.6 million long-dormant BTC from the network rather than let them be acquired by attackers. These Bitcoins have not moved for over 10 years and may be permanently lost, valued at approximately $42 billion at current prices. If future breakthroughs in quantum computing lead to the decryption of old address private keys, this portion of assets could be re-transferred, triggering severe market fluctuations or even a crisis of confidence.

Although the community recently proposed BIP-361, the proposal is still in its early stages and is not an officially promoted plan, but rather more like a contingency plan to address "extreme risks."

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