What if bitcoin was racing against time? For Anatoly Yakovenko, co-founder of Solana, the advent of quantum computing is no longer a distant hypothesis. According to him, there is a 50 % chance that a major breakthrough will occur within five years. A deadline that could obsolete bitcoin’s current cryptography and force the market’s leading crypto to urgently rethink its security architecture.
At the All-In Summit 2025, Anatoly Yakovenko, co-founder of Solana, issued a direct warning to the Bitcoin community, while the SEC is also tackling the issue of quantum security .
Believing that progress in quantum computing is much faster than expected, he said : “I think there is a 50% chance in the next five years that there will be a quantum breakthrough.”
According to him, the time for theoretical speculation is over, and concrete preparation is needed. “We should migrate bitcoin to a quantum-resistant signature scheme,” he stated.
Such a statement echoes his concerns about the cumulative effect of converging technologies like artificial intelligence, advanced optics, or new computing paradigms.
Yakovenko reveals the fundamental vulnerability of the Bitcoin protocol to a quantum breakthrough, which could call into question the foundations of its security. Currently, Bitcoin wallets rely on the ECDSA (Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm), whose strength depends on the difficulty of solving the elliptic curve discrete logarithm, a mathematical problem impossible for classical computers.
However, here is what could change if a functional quantum computer came into existence :
Yakovenko’s warning about bitcoin is not mere speculation. It fits within a context where accelerating technology renders old deadlines obsolete. For him, delaying adaptation would mean underestimating an existential risk.
While Yakovenko’s warning triggered some attention, it was not received with the same urgency across the ecosystem. Among historical Bitcoiners, the tone is much more measured.
Interviewed last June, Adam Back, CEO of Blockstream and respected figure in the cypherpunk movement, stated that current quantum computers “do not represent a credible threat to Bitcoin’s cryptography”, while conceding that a future threat remains probable. In his view, it might take 20 years before a real danger level is reached. This timeline strongly contrasts with that mentioned by Yakovenko.
Samson Mow, founder of Jan3, also acknowledges a real risk but believes the timeline is probably still a decade away from becoming critical. He even downplayed the potential impact of this threat : “I would say everything else will fail before bitcoin fails.”
Any major cryptographic modification to the Bitcoin protocol would imply a hard fork, a rule change for which community consensus is notoriously difficult to obtain. Such an operation could be technically complex, as the flagship crypto is undergoing deep changes .