Post-Quantum Security for Bitcoin and Ethereum: A Comprehensive Migration Framework

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Abstract

Bitcoin and Ethereum’s current combined 71% market dominance creates an unprecedented systemic risk as quantum computing threatens their cryptographic foundations. A successful quantum attack would not merely compromise individual chains but trigger cascading failures across exchanges, stablecoins, DeFi protocols, and tokenized assets—potentially destroying trillions in value. This paper presents a comprehensive framework for transitioning Bitcoin and Ethereum to post-quantum cryptography. We analyze vulnerabilities in ECDSA and SHA-256, evaluate NIST-standardized algorithms (ML-DSA, SLH-DSA, ML-KEM) alongside emerging alternatives, and propose a phased migration strategy using hybrid cryptographic schemes. Our proof-of-concept demonstrates quantum-safe transactions with acceptable performance trade-offs, including detailed soft fork mechanisms, backward compatibility solutions, and incentive structures to achieve network-wide adoption before quantum threats materialize. While theoretical models suggest a 42-month migration timeline, our analysis of real-world complexity, workforce constraints, and historical precedents indicates a more realistic 6–8-year timeline. The framework addresses critical challenges, including smart contract verification, cross-chain compatibility, and miner coordination, to ensure seamless transition while maintaining network security and functionality.

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