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Thomas pfp
Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
Genuine question in light of Google's Willow announcement. We knew for years that both Bitcoin and Ethereum would eventually need to move from their current ECDSA to a post-quantum cryptographic algorithm. My understanding is that such a move will require (i) the implementation of a new algorithm in the codebase, obviously, but also (ii) user action to migrate their tokens to the newly-generated, quantum-resistant addresses. If my understanding is correct, does it mean that inactive wallets (deceased owner, lost passphrase, etc.) will inevitably become vulnerable at some point, or will they be prohibited from transacting past a certain date after the switch? If it's the latter, it breaks the promise of permanence of blockchains. If the former, it means that at some point, vast amounts of tokens from dead wallets will be retrieved and will flood the market once again. Chief among them, of course, are Satoshi's own wallets. This race to crack and dump old wallets would be catastrophic to public trust IMO
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Daniel Lombraña
@teleyinex.eth
Check this cast https://warpcast.com/tylerfoust.eth/0x80984b2e
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
This is the “primer for normies” that’s been circulating everywhere. I already know that we’re a long way away from any meaningful quantum threat to ECDSA. My question is much more narrowly a second-order one: what happens to the disused wallets that won’t/can’t migrate
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Daniel Lombraña
@teleyinex.eth
Totally, that will be a big issue for sure and I hope the Ethereum foundation finds a way to solve it.
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