Close Menu
FSNN | Free Speech News NetworkFSNN | Free Speech News Network
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Legal & Courts
    • Tech & Big Tech
    • Campus & Education
    • Media & Culture
    • Global Free Speech
  • Opinions
    • Debates
  • Video/Live
  • Community
  • Freedom Index
  • About
    • Mission
    • Contact
    • Support
Trending

ICE Camera Crews Are Labeling Themselves ‘Media,’ Filming Anti-ICE Protesters

5 minutes ago

FIFA Changed Soccer’s Rules for Americans—and We Love It

7 minutes ago

Todd Blanche’s Record Raises Alarming Questions About the Future of the DOJ

10 minutes ago
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Discord Telegram
FSNN | Free Speech News NetworkFSNN | Free Speech News Network
Market Data Newsletter
Tuesday, July 14
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Legal & Courts
    • Tech & Big Tech
    • Campus & Education
    • Media & Culture
    • Global Free Speech
  • Opinions
    • Debates
  • Video/Live
  • Community
  • Freedom Index
  • About
    • Mission
    • Contact
    • Support
FSNN | Free Speech News NetworkFSNN | Free Speech News Network
Home»Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance»Google Sets 2029 Deadline to Deal With Quantum Threat—Is It a Problem for Bitcoin?
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Google Sets 2029 Deadline to Deal With Quantum Threat—Is It a Problem for Bitcoin?

News RoomBy News Room4 months agoNo Comments5 Mins Read1,602 Views
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
Google Sets 2029 Deadline to Deal With Quantum Threat—Is It a Problem for Bitcoin?
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

Listen to the article

0:00
0:00

Key Takeaways

Playback Speed

Select a Voice

In brief

  • Google publicly set a 2029 deadline to transition its systems to post-quantum cryptography.
  • Bitcoin faces long-term cryptographic risk as quantum breakthroughs compress security timelines.
  • Crypto must coordinate a slow, decentralized migration to quantum-resistant standards under external pressure.

Google is done treating quantum computing as a future problem. On Tuesday, the company published a formal timeline for transitioning its entire infrastructure to post-quantum cryptography (PQC) by 2029—calling the move urgent and saying quantum frontiers “may be closer than they appear.”

“As a pioneer in both quantum and PQC, it’s our responsibility to lead by example and share an ambitious timeline,” the blog reads. “Quantum computers will pose a significant threat to current cryptographic standards, and specifically to encryption and digital signature.”

The announcement, signed by Google VP of Security Engineering Heather Adkins and Senior Cryptography Engineer Sophie Schmieg, describes the 2029 target as a response to rapid advances in quantum hardware, error correction, and factoring resource estimates.

In plain English: The machines that could theoretically crack today’s encryption are getting real, faster than expected.

Google’s warning rests on two distinct threats. The first is already happening. So-called “harvest now, decrypt later” attacks allow bad actors to steal encrypted data today and sit on it, confident they’ll be able to unlock it once quantum computers are powerful enough. That threat is present-tense. The second is future-facing: digital signatures, the cryptographic foundation of authentication across the internet, will need to be replaced before a cryptographically relevant quantum computer—a CRQC—arrives.

To lead by example, Google announced that Android 17 will integrate post-quantum digital signature protection using ML-DSA, an algorithm recently standardized by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The company is also pushing PQC across Google Cloud and internal communications systems.

The 2029 deadline is not arbitrary. IBM has its own roadmap targeting fault-tolerant quantum systems by the same year. As both companies race toward that threshold, 2025 marked a turning point in the field—when error correction breakthroughs, new processor architectures, and a Caltech result trapping over 6,000 atomic qubits at once shifted the conversation from “if” to “when.”

What does it mean for Bitcoin?

Bitcoin runs on elliptic curve cryptography (or ECDSA signatures), the same class of math that quantum computers—running what’s known as Shor’s algorithm—could eventually reverse-engineer. That means: Given your public key, a sufficiently powerful quantum machine could derive your private key.

Normal computers would take centuries to crack something like this. Quantum computers may take that problem and turn it into something solvable in practical time.

The exposure is larger than most people realize. According to Project Eleven, a cybersecurity and crypto-focused startup working on protecting crypto from future quantum computer attacks, over 6.8 million Bitcoin—over $470 billion worth—sits in addresses that are vulnerable to quantum attacks, including coins from Bitcoin’s earliest days. A separate estimate from Ark Invest and Unchained puts roughly 35% of the total Bitcoin supply in address types theoretically vulnerable to a future quantum attack.

Source: Project eleven

Google’s researchers recently found that cracking RSA encryption may require 20 times fewer quantum resources than previously estimated—a finding that compressed the security timeline for everything that relies on similar mathematical structures, Bitcoin included. Earlier estimates put the qubit count needed to crack Bitcoin at around 20 million. Researchers at Iceberg Quantum now suggest the number could fall to roughly 100,000.

Quantum computers have achieved almost a 10x growth in power in the last five years.

Source: Programming-Helper.com

So, should we all panic and sell our coins? Not really—but we should pay attention.

First of all, Google isn’t saying quantum computers will break cryptography by 2029. It’s simply saying it plans to be ready before they do.

Also, Bitcoin developers are not asleep at the wheel. BIP 360, a proposal introducing a quantum-resistant address format called Pay-to-Merkle-Root, was recently merged into Bitcoin’s formal improvement repository. It doesn’t activate anything—but it starts the clock on a serious overhaul.

Jameson Lopp, co-founder of Bitcoin custody firm Casa, believes that even if quantum computers remain years away from posing a real threat, upgrading Bitcoin’s protocol and migrating billions in user funds could take five to 10 years on its own.

“Right now, we’re several orders of magnitude away from having a cryptographically relevant quantum computer, at least as far as we know,” Loop told Decrypt earlier this year. “If innovation in quantum computing continues at a similar, fairly linear rate, it’s going to take many years—probably over a decade, maybe even several decades—before we get to that point.”

Bitcoin’s decentralized governance means no single team can flip a switch. Miners, wallet developers, exchanges, and millions of individual users would all need to move simultaneously.

Google can set a 2029 deadline because it controls its own infrastructure. Bitcoin cannot. And that asymmetry is exactly what makes Google’s announcement matter for crypto—not as a death sentence, but as a hard deadline the network didn’t set for itself and can’t afford to ignore.

Daily Debrief Newsletter

Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.

Read the full article here

Fact Checker

Verify the accuracy of this article using AI-powered analysis and real-time sources.

Get Your Fact Check Report

Enter your email to receive detailed fact-checking analysis

5 free reports remaining

Continue with Full Access

You've used your 5 free reports. Sign up for unlimited access!

Already have an account? Sign in here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
News Room
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

The FSNN News Room is the voice of our in-house journalists, editors, and researchers. We deliver timely, unbiased reporting at the crossroads of finance, cryptocurrency, and global politics, providing clear, fact-driven analysis free from agendas.

Related Articles

Media & Culture

ICE Camera Crews Are Labeling Themselves ‘Media,’ Filming Anti-ICE Protesters

5 minutes ago
Media & Culture

FIFA Changed Soccer’s Rules for Americans—and We Love It

7 minutes ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Ethereum (ETH) Foundation spinout EthSystems targets banks with blockchain privacy technology

21 minutes ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Bitcoin Trader Warns of ‘Lower High’ as $64,000 Returns on US CPI Drop

23 minutes ago
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Bitcoin Ticks Up to $64K Following Largest Inflation Slowdown in Six Years

26 minutes ago
Media & Culture

Libel Defendant Can't "Stroll into a Deposition, Pull a Jon Lovitz and Announce," …

1 hour ago
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

FIFA Changed Soccer’s Rules for Americans—and We Love It

7 minutes ago

Todd Blanche’s Record Raises Alarming Questions About the Future of the DOJ

10 minutes ago

CPJ demands answers over reported jailing of Jordanian sports journalist 

12 minutes ago

Ethereum (ETH) Foundation spinout EthSystems targets banks with blockchain privacy technology

21 minutes ago
Latest Posts

Bitcoin Trader Warns of ‘Lower High’ as $64,000 Returns on US CPI Drop

23 minutes ago

Bitcoin Ticks Up to $64K Following Largest Inflation Slowdown in Six Years

26 minutes ago

Libel Defendant Can't "Stroll into a Deposition, Pull a Jon Lovitz and Announce," …

1 hour ago

Subscribe to News

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

At FSNN – Free Speech News Network, we deliver unfiltered reporting and in-depth analysis on the stories that matter most. From breaking headlines to global perspectives, our mission is to keep you informed, empowered, and connected.

FSNN.net is owned and operated by GlobalBoost Media
, an independent media organization dedicated to advancing transparency, free expression, and factual journalism across the digital landscape.

Facebook X (Twitter) Discord Telegram
Latest News

ICE Camera Crews Are Labeling Themselves ‘Media,’ Filming Anti-ICE Protesters

5 minutes ago

FIFA Changed Soccer’s Rules for Americans—and We Love It

7 minutes ago

Todd Blanche’s Record Raises Alarming Questions About the Future of the DOJ

10 minutes ago

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2026 GlobalBoost Media. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Our Authors
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

🍪

Cookies

We and our selected partners wish to use cookies to collect information about you for functional purposes and statistical marketing. You may not give us your consent for certain purposes by selecting an option and you can withdraw your consent at any time via the cookie icon.

Cookie Preferences

Manage Cookies

Cookies are small text that can be used by websites to make the user experience more efficient. The law states that we may store cookies on your device if they are strictly necessary for the operation of this site. For all other types of cookies, we need your permission. This site uses various types of cookies. Some cookies are placed by third party services that appear on our pages.

Your permission applies to the following domains:

  • https://fsnn.net
Necessary
Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.
Statistic
Statistic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Preferences
Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in.
Marketing
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.