What will Happen to Bitcoin when SHA256 Needs to be Replaced?

Thomas A. Fink™
2 min readMay 27, 2019
Image: Ian Hughes “50 qbit quantum computer”​ epredator flickr

All in theory: Moore’s Law will compromise all proof of work algorithms as newer mining equipment becomes affordable to fewer and fewer miners. Eventually one miner will have 51% control and it doesn’t need to be quantum.

*Edit: This already happened once back in July 2014 when the mining pool GHash.io passed a 51% hashrate.

*EndEdit

Bitcoin Mining Pools via www.blockchain.com

However quantum would be a definitive answer to this question because Moore’s Law is steadily approaching its limit for conventional CPU chips.

A functional 10000 qubit quantum computer can run Shor’s and Grover’s algorithm: Applying different approaches with Shor’s and Grover’s to associate private and public keys could break ECDSA 256.

The first 10000 qubit quantum computer could assert 51% control over any blockchain it targets.

If Bitcoin is still around like it is, a fork would happen to bb84, but before someone would almost certainly attack the blockchain at will if they could.

Quantum computers in 2019 by top qubit count:

  • Google’s Bristlecone: 72-qubit gate-based
  • IBM’s 50-qubit
  • Intel: 49-qubit-Test-Chip

How long will it take to get to 10000 qubits? No one knows exactly. Quantum computers are still messy and unpredictable.

*Edit: Here’s a good point I didn’t mention:

Check out this simple JavaScript blockchain on my website. Adjust the mining difficulty 0s @duckblo mentions. Watch your browser crash for fun!!

*EndEdit

Shoutout to da homie Kyle Gibson.

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Thomas A. Fink™

amateur geopol • astro • #design • ios+android software engineering • data science • neural networks • fiat enthusiast • student • 🇺🇸🇪🇺