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Bitcoin Developer Coalition Floats BIP-361 to Freeze Quantum-Vulnerable Wallets

Bitcoin’s current quantum defense plan seeks to solve a future threat at the detriment of its most sacred rule.
Bitcoin Developer Coalition Floats BIP-361 to Freeze Quantum-Vulnerable Wallets
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Bitcoin Bitcoin core developers are preparing for a quantum future with BIP-361, a proposed quick fix that would rewrite BTC's property rights guarantees.

What's the Scoop?

  • Updated Proposal: BIP-361, a newly authored proposal from a group of Bitcoin core developers, outlines a plan to invalidate transactions from quantum-vulnerable wallets, effectively freezing the coins of wallets that fail to upgrade. By invalidating legacy signatures, the proposal would pressure holders to migrate to quantum-resistant wallets, or risk losing permanent access to their funds.
  • Billions at Risk: Roughly 5.6M BTC (worth ~$420B and accounting for 28% of total supply) could be frozen under the proposal to prevent future quantum exploits. The tokens in question have been largely unmoved for over a decade, and include Satoshi Nakamoto's 1.1M BTC horde.
  • Ugly Solution: Posting on X, BIP-361 co-author Jameson Lopp Jameson Lopp said he doesn’t support the proposal and hopes it’s never needed, but argues that “in the face of an existential threat, individual economic incentives outweigh philosophical principles.”

What's the Take?

Freezing coins for any reason invalidated Bitcoin’s core promise of immutable ownership, introducing a precedent of intervention that could be more dangerous than the quantum threat itself.


Jack Inabinet

Written by Jack Inabinet

850 Articles View all      

Jack Inabinet is a Senior Analyst with a passion for exploring the bleeding edge of crypto and finance. Prior to joining Bankless, Jack worked as an analyst at HAL Real Estate where he conducted market research and financial analysis for commercial real estate development and acquisition activities in the Seattle region. He graduated from the University of Washington’s Michael G. Foster School of Business.

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