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From FAQQ
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=== Current News Articles ===
=== Current News Articles ===


* [https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/28/jpmorgan-hires-scientist-charles-lim-to-head-quantum-computing-unit.html 07/2022 cnbc.com: jpmorgen hires scientist to help protect financial system from quantum computers]
* [https://phys.org/news/2022-07-team-scripts-breakthrough-quantum-algorithm.amp 07/2022 phys.org: team scripts breakthrough quantum algorithm]
* [https://phys.org/news/2022-07-photonic-link-enable-all-silicon-quantum.html 07/2022 phys.org: all silicon quantum internet and "massive quantum computers" possible]
* [https://phys.org/news/2022-07-photonic-link-enable-all-silicon-quantum.html 07/2022 phys.org: all silicon quantum internet and "massive quantum computers" possible]



Revision as of 14:13, 28 July 2022

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Frequently asked quantum questions (FAQQ) is a wikimedia website towards answering, in a well-referenced fashion, common statements, assertions, and misconceptions about how quantum computing will effect Bitcoin along with the rest of the blockchain space.

It's put together by contributing members from the Quantum Resistant Ledger.

Overview

Assertions

  1. Quantum Computing is Coming
  2. It's going to affect Bitcoin

Misconceptions

  1. Bitcoin's developers have already planned for this.
  2. Bitcoin will just hard/softfork
  3. If they can break SHA_256, we’ll upgrade to SHA_384
  4. But if you don’t reuse addresses, you’re safe because BTC only exposes the hash of your public key if you have never transferred BTC from that address
  5. Quantum computing is a long ways away, there's no need to bother
  6. If ECDSA will be broken, banks and the whole internet is broken. Blockchain is the least we’ll need to worry about then.


Further reading

Current News Articles

Series: Quantum resistant blockchain and cryptocurrency, the full analysis

  1. Laying the groundwork
  2. Blockchain mathematical concepts
  3. Quantum resistant blockchains explained
  4. Challenges in upgrading existing blockchains
  5. Challenges in upgrading existing blockchains, continued
  6. Why BTC is vulnerable for quantum attacks sooner than todays estimates
  7. Common arguments and false claims

Academic Papers