
Crypto entrepreneur Nic Carter has urged Bitcoin developers to catch up on quantum resistance or risk losing out to Ethereum, which already has a post-quantum roadmap.
Elliptic curve cryptography (ECC) is the math that keeps Bitcoin (BTC) secure. Users pick a secret number (private key) and, using a special curved line and simple multiplication rules on that line, can quickly create a public address that everyone can see.
There are fears that quantum computers will have the ability to break this cryptography. The Bitcoin community is split on how to deal with it, with some advocating for upgrading cryptography while others say intervention would violate Bitcoin’s core principles.
“Elliptic curve cryptography is on the brink of obsolescence,” said Carter, the founding partner at Castle Island Ventures on X on Thursday. “Whether it’s 3 or 10 years; it’s over and we need to accept that.”
“The only thing that matters is how quickly blockchain developers recognize that they need to bake in cryptographic mutability into their networks.”
Carter argues that there will need to be an “entire reimagining” of how these systems work, and that today, the cryptography is hardcoded in. “That will have to change,” he added.
ARK Invest said in a paper on March 11 that about a third of all BTC was at risk from the quantum threat, but added that it was a “long-term risk.”
Carter said that Ethereum developers are already working on this with a new security team, linking to a detailed post-quantum roadmap by 2029 that has been set as a “top strategic priority.”
“ETH people have already figured this out. Everyone else seems to be petrified in fear. Unless something changes quickly, ETHBTC will start to reflect the divergence in prioritization.”
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin said in late February that validator signatures, data storage, accounts, and proofs must change to prepare for quantum threats, while proposing a quantum resistance roadmap.
Related: Vitalik Buterin outlines quantum resistance roadmap for Ethereum
At the same time, Carter has previously claimed on X that Bitcoin Core developers have been ignoring quantum-related proposals such as BIP-360.
Carter came down hard again on Bitcoin developers in his recent X thread, claiming they have a “worst in class approach,” and “deny, gaslight, gatekeep, bury heads in sand, say ‘the community will decide’ and then refuse to take feedback from the community when offered.”
Ethan Heilman, a co-author of BIP-360, responded in February that Core contributors have been engaging with the Bitcoin improvement proposal and that BIP-360 has received “more comments than any other BIP in the history of BIPs.”
Meanwhile, Google raised the stakes on Wednesday, setting a 2029 deadline for its post-quantum cryptography migration.
The search giant warned that quantum computers will “pose a significant threat” to current cryptographic standards, and “specifically to encryption and digital signatures.”
Magazine: Nobody knows if quantum secure cryptography will even work