PANews reported on October 21st that, according to CoinDesk , Coin Metrics co-founder Nic Carter called quantum computing the greatest long-term risk to Bitcoin's core cryptography. He explained the one-way nature of deducing public keys from private keys via the secp256k1 elliptic curve, and pointed out that exposing public keys on-chain during spending transactions increases the potential attack surface. Carter recommends avoiding address reuse in the near term to reduce public key exposure, and promoting post-quantum signature schemes and feasible migration paths in the long term. A subsequent article in his series will discuss the " post-quantum break " scenario.
Coin Metrics co-founder: Quantum computing is the biggest long-term risk to Bitcoin's core cryptography


PAData: Web3 in Data
Data analysis and visual communication of industry hot spots help users understand the meaning and opportunities behind each data.

A complete review of the 1011 encryption storm
An in-depth review of the epic liquidation events of October 11: from the Trump tariff black swan event to high-leverage margin calls, stablecoin depegging, and market maker liquidity depletion.

Pioneer's View: Crypto Celebrity Interviews
Exclusive interviews with crypto celebrities, sharing unique observations and insights

AI Agent: The Journey to Web3 Intelligence
The AI Agen innovation wave is sweeping the world. How will it take root in Web3? Let’s embark on this intelligent journey together

Memecoin Supercycle: The hype around attention tokenization
From joke culture to the trillion-dollar race, Memecoin has become an integral part of the crypto market. In this Memecoin super cycle, how can we seize the opportunity?

Real-time tracking of Bybit attack
Bybit suffered a security incident, and funds worth $1.44 billion were withdrawn. A North Korean hacker group was accused of being the perpetrator.