@QANplatform Great post today, team.
$Qanx - time to get on the phone to #LarryFink and tell BlackRock that @QANplatform is the future #layer1 Blockchain for enterprise
BlackRock Quantum Whitepaper: The Threat & The Hard Truth
Key takeaways:
Quantum computers could break current encryption within years, not decades. BlackRock confirms the timeline has accelerated.
The quantum threat
Shor's Algorithm can break Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC), the exact math securing Bitcoin and Ethereum digital signatures. A sufficiently powerful quantum computer could derive private keys from public keys visible on-chain.
Bitcoin's vulnerability
Approximately 35% of the Bitcoin supply (~7M BTC) is currently exposed:
• 1.9M BTC in P2PK/P2TR/P2MS addresses
• 5M BTC in addresses with reused keys
This creates two distinct attack vectors:
At-Rest: CRQC (Cryptographically Relevant Quantum Computers) can steal coins from the 35% of supply even if never spent.
On-Spend: All Bitcoin addresses become vulnerable during the 10-minute mempool window of a transaction.
Quantum is advancing fast
• Google has moved its encryption migration deadline to 2029.
• IBM targets large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum systems by 2029–2033.
• Recent breakthroughs in error correction have pulled timelines forward significantly.
The migration crisis
Governments plan full migration by 2035, BlackRock notes that while technically feasible, coordination is the bottleneck. It requires multi-year timelines that legacy chains simply may not have.
Legacy chain problems
• Bitcoin: Development is relatively decentralized and there is no current consensus on PQ encryption/signature schemes, migration timelines, and the optimal specific implementation mechanisms.
• Ethereum: Requires seven upcoming network updates/hard forks (2026–2029) with massive complexity due to Proof-of-Stake and smart contracts.
• Ecosystem: Exchanges, custodians, and validators must simultaneously upgrade hardware, software, and policies.
Why QANplatform, the post-quantum blockchain wins
We built quantum-resistant cryptography as our foundation, not as a retrofit. No consensus chaos. No 35% of supply at risk. Already defended from day one.
The bottom line
BlackRock states that upgrading cryptographic systems is easier than building a quantum computer. However, they also admit migration is coordination-heavy and slow, while quantum timelines have accelerated to within years.
We don't face this dilemma. We are already secured.
Q-Day favors the future-proof.
@Degen_Hardy@DeFiTracer SpaceX is a liquidity sink right now. But since the IPO is heavily oversubscribed, a ton of that capital is going to get rejected. Let's hope those that get disappointed tomorrow return that capital back to BTC and perhaps some of my AI picks !
@cryptofishx Mr Fish, a kinda, soft-shill, but $Qanx is exactly this-
✅ Nist approved Quantum resistance
🤝 Official IBM Business Partner
🏛️ Working with an EU Government
🏦 Ueno Bank & ITTI partnerships
✍️ Signquantum ecosystem integration
🏦Real enterprise adoption
Mainnet this year !
@cryptofishx It's time for shit coins to die, and for Blockchain's that offer real utility to re-garner interest.
@QANplatform should be on everyone's radar. Hybrid Layer 1, NIST approved Quantum resistance, any language coding, Devv Royalties, government adoption & more
I love $BTC, though I'm not sure institutions still see it as a safe haven knowing Q-day is a reality. I think that's why I also love $Qanx - Q-resistant from genesis block, built for enterprise adoption.
@Cointelegraph@QANplatform are no doubt in the running for this accolade. They already have use cases which involves banking E-signatures, protection of a EU government. And a pilot case with a financial institution, and Government which is in the pipeline. $QANX is way under the radar 💰
SHA-1 is a cryptographic algorithm that secures digital signatures and certificates across the internet. Deprecating it started with NIST warnings in 2011, a public collision attack demonstration in 2017, and browsers flagging every non-compliant site as insecure. The full migration took the better part of two decades and it is still not universally complete.
Governments have already published quantum migration mandates for federal systems. The US, UK, and Canada have all issued formal PQC migration roadmaps. Bipartisan US legislation introduced in 2025 requires federal agencies to upgrade high-impact systems by January 2027.
That is the SHA-1 playbook running again: mandates, deadlines, enforcement through procurement and regulation.
Blockchain has no browser. It has no regulator with a flag. The enforcement mechanism does not exist.
SHA-1 migration took two decades with all of those tools in place.
Nobody has explained what migration looks like without them.
He built a legal practice on one promise: that anchoring agreements to a blockchain made them the most cryptographically verifiable contracts ever written.
He was right. Until it turned out the math underneath them had an expiration date.
It is a Friday afternoon in 2028.
Daniel is a law firm partner. Between 2020 and 2023 he built an entire practice around anchoring legal agreements to public blockchains. Immutable. Timestamped. Cryptographically verifiable. He gave talks. He wrote papers. He brought in fourteen enterprise clients.
He is staring at an email from the firm's new cryptographic security consultant.
The summary is this:
Nearly every agreement anchored on-chain during those years was signed with ECDSA. The public keys are permanently recorded on the ledger. And in a post-quantum world, where quantum computers can break elliptic curve math, a sophisticated adversary could forge a signature mathematically indistinguishable from the original. Not altering the document, but destroying the ability to prove beyond doubt who signed it.
Daniel's entire practice was built on one promise.
We can prove who signed what, and when, beyond any reasonable doubt.
He reads the consultant's recommendation.
"Review evidentiary reliance on pre-2024 on-chain signatures before introducing them in any proceedings."
He picks up the phone to call the first client on the list.
He puts it back down.
He picks it up again.
“The Builder Liquidity Flywheel”
Some thoughts on why @QANplatform needs proper launch infrastructure and builder rails before everything else truly compounds!
The first Qanforge article is live on Paragraph👇
https://t.co/XPnC5iku4t