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Project Eleven Raises $6M to Defend Bitcoin From the Coming Quantum Threat
Project Eleven Raises $6M to Defend Bitcoin From the Coming Quantum Threat

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Project Eleven Raises $6M to Defend Bitcoin From the Coming Quantum Threat

Project Eleven has raised $6 million to protect bitcoin BTC from the existential threat of quantum computing, as fears mount that the network's core cryptography could one day be rendered obsolete. The round was co-led by Variant Fund and Quantonation, with participation from Castle Island Ventures alongside founding investors Nebular and Formation, according to a release. "As quantum computing capabilities advance, the threat to systems like Bitcoin is no longer theoretical, it's imminent," Alex Pruden, CEO of Project Eleven, said in a release. "This funding allows us to stay ahead of that curve, building the tools, standards, and ecosystem required to ensure digital assets remain secure in a post-quantum world,' Pruden said. Earlier this year, Project Eleven launched the Q-Day Prize, offering 1 BTC to the first team that can break Bitcoin's elliptic curve cryptography (ECC) using a quantum computer. 'We define Q-Day as the moment when quantum computers become capable of breaking the elliptic-curve cryptography that secures private keys used by Bitcoin,' said Conor Deegan, co-founder and VP of Engineering at Project Eleven in a release. Project Eleven also announced it is launching Yellowpages a post-quantum cryptographic registry where users can generate hybrid key pairs, create proofs linking them to their existing BTC addresses, and timestamp those proofs on a verifiable ledger. Yellowpages works by having users generate a new key pair using post-quantum cryptographic algorithms, such as lattice-based systems, that are resistant to the types of attacks a future quantum computer could launch. They then create a cryptographic proof linking this quantum-safe key to their existing BTC address. That proof is timestamped and stored in Yellowpages, a public registry hosted off-chain. It doesn't move funds or alter anything on the Bitcoin blockchain, but creates a verifiable paper trail of wallet ownership that could serve as a fallback if elliptic curve cryptography is ever broken. 'Preparing ahead of Q-Day means ensuring that digital assets remain secure and verifiable in a post-quantum world. With Yellowpages, we're giving users free, audited, and open-source tools to proactively establish quantum-resilient ownership today,' Deegan continued. The approach contrasts with solutions like QRAMP, a Bitcoin Improvement Proposal that mandates a hard-fork migration to quantum-safe addresses. While effective in theory, QRAMP and similar proposals face a high barrier to adoption because they would require consensus, a tall order in a governance environment known for caution. Ethereum's multi-year journey to Proof-of-Stake and Bitcoin's recent OP_RETURN debate are reminders of just how slow protocol change can be, and some analysts have warned that the slow governance process is a threat itself. This route would bypass the need for consensus, while also facilitating the mass adoption of quantum defenses. As Rick Maeda of Presto Research recently warned in an interview with CoinDesk, quantum defenses must be built linearly, not reactively, because by the time the threat is real, it's already too late. Project Eleven's latest moves suggest some in the crypto industry are taking this threat seriously while acknowledging the weakness of current methods.

Quantum Computing Group Offers 1 BTC to Whoever Breaks Bitcoin's Cryptographic Key
Quantum Computing Group Offers 1 BTC to Whoever Breaks Bitcoin's Cryptographic Key

Yahoo

time18-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Quantum Computing Group Offers 1 BTC to Whoever Breaks Bitcoin's Cryptographic Key

Project Eleven, a quantum computing research and advocacy firm, has launched the Q-Day Prize, a global competition offering 1 bitcoin (BTC) to the first team able to break an elliptic curve cryptographic (ECC) key, the cryptography which secures the Bitcoin network, using Shor's algorithm on a quantum computer. Shor's algorithm is a quantum computing method that efficiently factors large numbers into their prime components, theoretically allowing quantum computers to break cryptographic algorithms like RSA and elliptic-curve cryptography used in Bitcoin and other blockchain networks. The contest comes as quantum computing advancements mean that a workable quantum computer might only be years away. Project Elevent has also identified more than 10 million bitcoin addresses with non-zero balances potentially at risk of quantum attacks. The Bitcoin community is aware of the quantum computing threat and is working on solutions. As CoinDesk previously reported, a Bitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP), titled Quantum-Resistant Address Migration Protocol (QRAMP), was introduced in early April, which suggests enforcing a network-wide migration to post-quantum cryptography to safeguard Bitcoin wallets. This would require a hard fork, however, and getting that sort of consensus would be an uphill battle. Quantum startup BTQ has also proposed its own solution: a quantum-based alternative to Bitcoin's Proof of Work called Coarse-Grained Boson Sampling (CGBS). CGBS works by using quantum computing to generate unique patterns of photons (light particles called bosons), replacing traditional mining puzzles with quantum-based sampling tasks for validation. But BTQ's CGBS also requires a hard fork, and the appetite for such a change isn't yet known.

Quantum Computing Group Offers 1 BTC to Whoever Breaks Bitcoin's Cryptographic Key
Quantum Computing Group Offers 1 BTC to Whoever Breaks Bitcoin's Cryptographic Key

Yahoo

time18-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Quantum Computing Group Offers 1 BTC to Whoever Breaks Bitcoin's Cryptographic Key

Project Eleven, a quantum computing research and advocacy firm, has launched the Q-Day Prize, a global competition offering 1 bitcoin (BTC) to the first team able to break an elliptic curve cryptographic (ECC) key, the cryptography which secures the Bitcoin network, using Shor's algorithm on a quantum computer. Shor's algorithm is a quantum computing method that efficiently factors large numbers into their prime components, theoretically allowing quantum computers to break cryptographic algorithms like RSA and elliptic-curve cryptography used in Bitcoin and other blockchain networks. The contest comes as quantum computing advancements mean that a workable quantum computer might only be years away. Project Elevent has also identified more than 10 million bitcoin addresses with non-zero balances potentially at risk of quantum attacks. The Bitcoin community is aware of the quantum computing threat and is working on solutions. As CoinDesk previously reported, a Bitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP), titled Quantum-Resistant Address Migration Protocol (QRAMP), was introduced in early April, which suggests enforcing a network-wide migration to post-quantum cryptography to safeguard Bitcoin wallets. This would require a hard fork, however, and getting that sort of consensus would be an uphill battle. Quantum startup BTQ has also proposed its own solution: a quantum-based alternative to Bitcoin's Proof of Work called Coarse-Grained Boson Sampling (CGBS). CGBS works by using quantum computing to generate unique patterns of photons (light particles called bosons), replacing traditional mining puzzles with quantum-based sampling tasks for validation. But BTQ's CGBS also requires a hard fork, and the appetite for such a change isn't yet known.

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