Salta al contenuto
  • home
  • News
  • How to
  • Coin information
  • Bot Lab
  • General Discussion
  • Recenti
  • Popolare
  • Tag
Skin
  • Chiaro
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Scuro
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Predefinito (Nessuna skin)
  • Nessuna skin
Collassa

Coinsori

  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Bitcoiners propose freezing quantum-vulnerable coins in BIP-361

I sostenitori di Bitcoin propongono di bloccare le criptovalute vulnerabili agli attacchi quantistici, secondo la proposta BIP-361

Pianificato Fissato Bloccato Spostato News
1 Post 1 Autori 1 Visualizzazioni
  • Da Vecchi a Nuovi
  • Da Nuovi a Vecchi
  • Più Voti
Rispondi
  • Risposta alla discussione
Effettua l'accesso per rispondere
Questa discussione è stata eliminata. Solo gli utenti con diritti di gestione possono vederla.
  • L Non in linea
    L Non in linea
    lklol
    scritto ultima modifica di
    #1

    Update (April 15, 6:45 am UTC): This article has been updated to include comments from Jameson Lopp.

    Cypherpunk Jameson Lopp and five co-authors from the Bitcoin quantum security space have proposed freezing quantum-vulnerable coins on the Bitcoin network, including Satoshi’s $74 billion stash, to prevent them from being stolen once quantum computers become available.

    The move is the second part of a three-stage proposal under BIP-361 called the “Post Quantum Migration and Legacy Signature Sunset,” which was posted as a draft to GitHub on Tuesday.

    It addresses a major risk to Bitcoin — the potential use of quantum computers to steal roughly 1.7 million BTC locked in early P2PK addresses, including Satoshi’s stash, which are not quantum-proof.

    In the wrong hands, these coins could significantly undermine the value of the network.

    Lopp told Cointelegraph on Wednesday that BIP-361 is not currently in a position to be adopted.

    “Rather, it's a rough sketch of one way we could approach the issue of a looming circulating supply shock if quantum computing advances to the point that a post-quantum signature scheme achieves consensus for being added to Bitcoin.”
    He expects various aspects of BIP-361 to “continue to evolve over the years as more research and development is conducted in this area.”

    Three phases to quantum security

    BIP-361 builds on BIP-360, released in February, which proposed a soft fork for a new output type called pay-to-Merkle-root (P2MR). It works similarly to Bitcoin’s existing Taproot (P2TR) addresses but with the quantum-vulnerable key path removed.

    While BIP-360 protects new coins going forward, it does not address the roughly 34% of the supply that remains vulnerable unless it is transferred to new addresses.

    BIP-361 proposes that three years after activation, phase A of the proposal would prevent any new BTC from being sent to old-style addresses, with all users on quantum-resistant address types.

    The second phase (B) would invalidate old-style signatures and any Bitcoin still sitting in vulnerable addresses becomes effectively frozen five years after activation.

    Phase C provides a potential rescue mechanism using zero-knowledge proofs, allowing people who missed the deadline but still have their seed phrase to recover frozen funds.

    The authors described it as a “private incentive to upgrade” because lost or frozen coins only make everyone else’s coins worth slightly more, whereas quantum-recovered coins make everyone else’s worth less.

    “This is not an offensive attack, rather, it is defensive: our thesis is that the Bitcoin ecosystem wishes to defend itself and its interests against those who would prefer to do nothing and allow a malicious actor to destroy both value and trust.”
    Bitcoin community pushes back

    However, the proposal would render some existing UTXOs unspendable by their owners if they fail to upgrade, which some have seen as a significant philosophical departure from Bitcoin’s ethos.

    Bitcoin protocol developer and researcher Mark Erhardt, who shared BIP-361 on X on Tuesday, was met with community pushback and comments such as “this quantum proposal is highly authoritarian and confiscatory … there is no good rationale for forcing the upgrade and rendering old spends invalid.”

    Bitcoin Magazine editor Brian Trollz rejected the proposal outright, TFTC founder Marty Bent called it “laughable,” and Phil Geiger, head of business development at Metaplanet, quipped, “We have to steal people’s money to prevent their money from being stolen.”
    source: https://www.tradingview.com/news/cointelegraph:b933aa569094b:0-bitcoiners-propose-freezing-quantum-vulnerable-coins-in-bip-361/

    1 Risposta Ultima Risposta
    0

    Ciao! Sembra che tu sia interessato a questa conversazione, ma non hai ancora un account.

    Stanco di dover scorrere gli stessi post a ogni visita? Quando registri un account, tornerai sempre esattamente dove eri rimasto e potrai scegliere di essere avvisato delle nuove risposte (tramite email o notifica push). Potrai anche salvare segnalibri e votare i post per mostrare il tuo apprezzamento agli altri membri della comunità.

    Con il tuo contributo, questo post potrebbe essere ancora migliore 💗

    Registrati Accedi
    Rispondi
    • Risposta alla discussione
    Effettua l'accesso per rispondere
    • Da Vecchi a Nuovi
    • Da Nuovi a Vecchi
    • Più Voti


    • Accedi

    • Non hai un account? Registrati

    • Accedi o registrati per effettuare la ricerca.
    Powered by NodeBB Contributors
    • Primo post
      Ultimo post
    0
    • home
    • News
    • How to
    • Coin information
    • Bot Lab
    • General Discussion
    • Recenti
    • Popolare
    • Tag