Close Menu
  • Instructions
  • News
    • DeFi
    • Smart Contract
    • Markets
    • Web3
    • Adoption
    • Memecoins
    • Analysis
    • Mining
    • Scams
    • Security
  • Education
    • Learn
    • Wallets & Exchange
  • Documentaries
  • Videos
    • Alessio Rastani
    • Altcoin Buzz
    • Coin Bureau
    • Dapp University
    • DataDash
    • Digital asset News
    • EllioTrades Crypto
    • MMCrypto
    • Lark Davis
    • Ivan on Tech
    • Benjamin Cowen
  • Market
    • Crypto Market Cap
    • Heat Map
    • Converter
    • Metal Prices
    • Stock prices
  • Bonus Books
  • Tools
What's Hot

Bitdeer Sells All Mined BTC This Week: Zero-Holding Strategy Intensifies

May 2, 2026

How North Korean spies spent months in-person to drain $285 million from Drift

May 2, 2026

Crypto industry backs CLARITY Act yield compromise, pushes Senate Banking for markup

May 2, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Recession Profit AlertsRecession Profit Alerts
  • Instructions
  • News
    • DeFi
    • Smart Contract
    • Markets
    • Web3
    • Adoption
    • Memecoins
    • Analysis
    • Mining
    • Scams
    • Security
  • Education
    • Learn
    • Wallets & Exchange
  • Documentaries
  • Videos
    • Alessio Rastani
    • Altcoin Buzz
    • Coin Bureau
    • Dapp University
    • DataDash
    • Digital asset News
    • EllioTrades Crypto
    • MMCrypto
    • Lark Davis
    • Ivan on Tech
    • Benjamin Cowen
  • Market
    • Crypto Market Cap
    • Heat Map
    • Converter
    • Metal Prices
    • Stock prices
  • Bonus Books
  • Tools
Recession Profit AlertsRecession Profit Alerts
Home»Security»Quantum Computing Risk to Cryptos, Ledger CTO Flags Key Vulnerability
Security

Quantum Computing Risk to Cryptos, Ledger CTO Flags Key Vulnerability

March 1, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read

According to Ledger CTO Charles Guillemet, blockchain security relies heavily on Elliptic Curve Cryptography, as seen in public and private keys.

While not an immediate threat, it is believed that once quantum computers are powerful enough, Elliptic Curve Cryptography could be broken, meaning private keys could be computed from exposed public keys.

Guillemet added that while it is tempting to think Bitcoin public keys “usually aren’t on-chain,” this is not so as, in practice, public keys are revealed when users spend, and some are already exposed in early outputs and through address reuse.

Given this threat, “wait and see” is not an option, according to Guillemet, as preparation has to start long before quantum capability becomes real.

The good news, however, is that post-quantum cryptography provides quantum-resistant signature schemes, mainly in two families: hash based and lattice based. Hash based are large signatures, very conservative but well studied. Lattice based are modern, more scalable and have seen less long-term study.

While the math is just one piece of the puzzle, implementing it securely into signers is where things get tricky, Guillemet added.

What does post-quantum computing actually mean in daily life? Kicking off a series on PQC in hardware signers. @DonjonLedger explores what matters in practice: implementing PQ signatures inside Secure Elements under real embedded constraints and threat models. đź§µ pic.twitter.com/9uGtbXUzf5

— Charles Guillemet (@P3b7_) February 27, 2026

Hardware signers are now the gold standard for securing crypto, according to the Ledger CTO, as keys stay offline and signing happens inside a secure element.

See also  Localization is key to thriving in crypto’s emerging APAC markets

Guillemet revealed that the ledger is currently working on post-quantum cryptography experiments, running software only (no hardware acceleration) implementations directly inside Secure Elements, however, RAM pressure and compute cost remain major bottlenecks.

Seven million $BTC at risk?

Experts warn that quantum computers powerful enough to break Bitcoin’s cryptography might put about seven million coins, including about one million attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto, at risk.

Seven million coins out of a 19.99 million $BTC circulating supply are at risk due to this: in Bitcoin’s early years, pay-to-public-key (P2PK) transactions embedded public keys directly on-chain. Modern addresses often reveal only a hash of the key until coins are spent, but once a public key is exposed through early mining or address reuse, exposure remains permanent. In a well advanced quantum scenario, those keys could, in theory, be reversed.

Crypto participants are already moving ahead of this threat. On Thursday, ETH cofounder Vitalik Buterin outlined a roadmap to secure the Ethereum blockchain from the long-term risks posed by quantum computers.

Although practical quantum computers capable of breaking modern cryptography do not yet exist, they could eventually crack the digital signatures and cryptographic systems that secure Ethereum.



Source link

Computing cryptos CTO Flags key Ledger Quantum Risk vulnerability

Related Posts

How North Korean spies spent months in-person to drain $285 million from Drift

May 2, 2026

Meteora reports $1.5 million OTC scam loss in Q1 MET report

May 2, 2026

Crypto hack losses top $630M in April, highest since February 2025

May 2, 2026

US seized $500M in Iranian crypto assets, Treasury secretary says

May 2, 2026
Top Posts

Bioventus Stock: Improving Outlook Keeps It Interesting

October 12, 2023

AI Deepfake Videos of Binance’s CZ and Yi He Flood Crypto Twitter

February 9, 2026

Crypto community accuses WSJ of exaggerating Hamas crypto funding by 99%

October 23, 2023

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.