Bitcoin's BIP-361 Quantum Fix Splits Community Over Address Freezing

Crypto Frontier
BTC2.22%

A proposed Bitcoin improvement to address quantum vulnerability has divided the cryptocurrency community over whether to freeze legacy addresses, including those attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto. The BIP-361 proposal, which went live on April 14, has sparked debate between prominent figures including software engineer Jameson Lopp, who supports the measure, and Adam Back, who opposes it.

The BIP-361 Proposal and Community Divide

BIP-361 introduces a “post quantum migration and legacy signature sunset” mechanism to protect Bitcoin from potential quantum computing attacks. The proposal remains in draft phase with no deadline for signaling support.

The proposal works in two stages. In phase A, new transactions to quantum-vulnerable addresses would be frozen, forcing the network to shift to post-quantum (PQ) address types. Phase B would block all spending to vulnerable addresses, potentially with a five-year grace period. According to the proposal, responsibility for quantum-proof holding will rest with individual wallet holders, each required to upgrade their addresses.

Rough estimates suggest approximately 6.7M BTC may be at risk due to being held in early, less secure addresses. The argument for freezing is that hacked funds could be sold, undermining Bitcoin’s price and eroding trust in the network.

Community reaction has been mixed. Cypherpunk Jimmy Song tweeted on April 16, 2026: “BIP361 is a complete non-starter for me, but I would still like to see an attempt by its supporters to put it on the Bitcoin network as either a soft fork or a hard fork. Not because I want to get a ‘fork dividend,’ but because we need to see how these things play out.” Supporters of BIP-361 argue that the original Bitcoin ethos of self-ownership without centralized censorship is outdated in the face of quantum threats.

Quantum Hacking Feasibility and Counterarguments

Opponents of BIP-361 argue that quantum computing poses a less imminent threat than proponents suggest. Satoshi Nakamoto’s addresses use the P2PK standard, which exposes public keys and leaves them theoretically vulnerable to quantum attacks. However, Satoshi’s holdings are spread across more than 22,000 addresses, meaning each would need to be individually hacked before coins could be released.

Critics also note that quantum computers are not yet readily available outside research contexts, and using them for attacks may be prohibitively expensive in the near term. While quantum algorithms continue to improve and lower the computational requirements for attacks, viable quantum hacking remains far from practical reality.

Alternative solutions have been proposed, including a hard fork to a quantum-proof network at a predetermined block with a long grace period for claiming coins—an approach similar to one suggested by Satoshi Nakamoto in Bitcoin’s early days. Some community members suggest leaving the network as-is, treating old wallets as a bounty for quantum computer developers.

The debate underscores a fundamental tension: how to ensure Bitcoin’s long-term survival against future threats without undermining its market value, reputation, and the proof-of-work consensus achieved to date. Address freezing may protect large holdings and prevent a flash crash if wallets are compromised, but critics argue it contradicts Bitcoin’s core ethos of avoiding censorship and asset freezes.

FAQ

What is BIP-361 and when was it proposed? BIP-361 is a proposal to address Bitcoin’s potential vulnerability to quantum computing attacks through a “post quantum migration and legacy signature sunset” mechanism. The proposal went live on April 14 and remains in draft phase with no deadline for signaling support.

How much Bitcoin could be at risk from quantum attacks? Rough estimates suggest approximately 6.7M BTC may be at risk due to being held in early, less secure addresses, particularly those using the P2PK standard like Satoshi Nakamoto’s holdings.

Is quantum hacking a realistic near-term threat to Bitcoin? According to the source, quantum computers are not yet readily available outside research contexts, and using them for attacks may be prohibitively expensive in the near term. While quantum algorithms are improving, viable quantum hacking remains far from practical reality.

免责声明:本页面信息可能来自第三方,不代表 Gate 的观点或意见。页面显示的内容仅供参考,不构成任何财务、投资或法律建议。Gate 对信息的准确性、完整性不作保证,对因使用本信息而产生的任何损失不承担责任。虚拟资产投资属高风险行为,价格波动剧烈,您可能损失全部投资本金。请充分了解相关风险,并根据自身财务状况和风险承受能力谨慎决策。具体内容详见声明

相关文章

ZachXBT 警惕:反对使用 Bitcoin Depot ATM,存在 44% 以上的比特币加价

ZachXBT 警告称,比特币帝波特(Bitcoin Depot)自动取款机施加高额溢价——$25k 法币按每枚 BTC 108k 美元计价,而非约$75k 市场(约 44%),在 0.232 BTC 上导致约 7.5k 美元损失;此外还指出一次 3.26M 美元的安全漏洞。 本文总结了 ZachXBT 对 Bitcoin Depot 定价做法及近期安全漏洞的警告,强调由于费率被抬高和安全疏漏而对用户带来的风险。

GateNews20 分钟前

比特币在伊朗重新开放霍尔木兹海峡后创下10周高点

比特币在伊朗重新打开霍尔木兹海峡后跃升至 $78K 之上。 ETF 资金流入以及机构买盘强力支撑了比特币的上涨行情。 尽管看涨势头持续且地缘政治不确定性仍在,市场仍保持谨慎。 比特币 — BTC,最近在周五之后急剧飙升,原因是

Crypto News Land55 分钟前

交易员 Killa 将比特币空头仓位止损上调至 $83,000

交易员 Killa 将他的 BTC 空头止损从 $80,000 上调至 $83,000;这一调整发生在 4 月中旬以 $74,688 做空之后,表明随着市场演变,他更新了风险管理策略。他预测 2025 年 5 月的多头峰值,并拥有 18 万+ 粉丝。 摘要:该文章指出,在 4 月中旬以 $74,688 做空之后,BTC 交易员 Killa 将他的空头止损从 $80,000 提高到 $83,000,体现了在市场条件不断变化背景下的风险管理更新。文章还强调了他对 2025 年 5 月多头峰值的预测以及他 18 万粉丝的情况。

GateNews1小时前

MicroStrategy 在比特币持仓上超过 BlackRock,如今持有 815,061 枚 BTC

MicroStrategy 目前持有 815,061 枚 BTC,在购入 34,164 枚 BTC、耗资约 25.4 亿美元后超越 BlackRock;并预留约 616 亿美元,成本基准约为 7.55 万美元。未实现利润约 2.42 亿美元;4 月收益率 6.2%(年化 9.5% )(截至目前)。

GateNews2小时前

BTC 空头鲸鱼以 311 万美元被清算,比特币突破 78K 后以 40 倍杠杆重新开仓

Hyperinsight 记录到,一头在 (~$3.11M) 附近两次被清算的 BTC 空头鲸鱼,在第八周度清算中损失了 40 BTC;随后它以 30,000 美元重新进入 40x 空头仓位,目前 $310k 名义价值为 310,000 美元,清算价为 $79,085。

GateNews2小时前

比特币永续合约未平仓量在24小时内飙升5.79%,至596.15亿美元

比特币永续合约未平仓量在主要交易所上升了5.79%,至$59.615B;Gate占总量的$5.178B,而三家主要CEX分别持有$10.316B、$3.533B和$4.709B.

GateNews2小时前
评论
0/400
暂无评论