Quantum computers may soon breach blockchain cryptography: Report

Share This Post

Cryptography experts are somewhat skeptical of the technique’s scalability, but aren’t ruling out the possibility of success either.

According to a recent paper, Chinese researchers claimed to have discovered a novel method to break the Rivest–Shamir–Adleman 2048 bit (RSA-2048) signing algorithm present in blockchains and other security protocols. RSA is a cryptographic technique that utilizes a public key to encrypt information and a private key to decrypt them. 

Breaching the RSA-2048 algorithm requires, similar to other algorithms in the RSA numbers family, finding the prime factors of a number with 617 decimal digits and 2048 binary digits. Experts estimate that it would take ordinary computers 300 trillion years to break an RSA-2048 encryption key. However, Chinese researchers said in their paper that the encryption could be inversed with a quantum computer with 372 qubits, or a basic unit of information acting as a proxy for computation power.

In comparison, the latest IBM Osprey quantum computer has a processing capacity of 433 qubits. Previously, experts calculated that factoring RSA-2048 with quantum computers employing Shor’s algorithm (a quantum factoring method) would require 13,436 qubits. 

Unlike classical computers that operate on a binary basis of 0 or 1, quantum computers utilize quantum bits that can take on infinite states at temperatures of -273°C (-459.4°F), achieved by using liquid gas coolants. Thus, the quantum computer is able to map out all possible solutions to a cryptographic problem and attempt them all at once, increasing efficiency on an astronomic scale.

Comparison of classical vs quantum computing | Source: Towards Data Science. 

As told by American cryptographer Bruce Schneier, Chinese researchers appear to have combined “classical lattice reduction factoring techniques with a quantum approximate optimization algorithm” that successfully factored 48-bit numbers using a 10-qubit quantum computer. “And while there are always potential problems when scaling something like this up by a factor of 50, there are no obvious barriers,” Schneier commented. 

Security expert Roger Grimes also added:

“Apparently what happened is another guy who had previously announced he was able to break traditional asymmetric encryption using classical computers…but reviewers found a flaw in his algorithm and that guy had to retract his paper. But this Chinese team realized that the step that killed the whole thing could be solved by small quantum computers. So they tested and it worked.”

Schneier also warned that the algorithm relies on a recent factoring paper authored by Peter Schnorr, where its algorithm works well with small bits but falls apart at larger sizes, with no tangible explanation. “So if it’s true that the Chinese paper depends on this Schnorr technique that doesn’t scale, the techniques in this Chinese paper won’t scale, either,” Schneier wrote. 

“In general, the smart bet is on the new techniques not working. But someday, that bet will be wrong.”

Quantum computers are also limited by operational factors such as heat loss and the requirement of a complex -273°C (-459.4°F) cooling infrastructure. Thus, the number of nominal qubits required to inverse cryptographic algorithms is likely far higher than theoretical estimates.

Although researchers have not yet done so, the methodology could be theoretically replicable to other RSA-2048 protocols used in informational technology, such as HTTPS, email, web browsing, two-factor authentication, etc. Ethereum (ETH) co-founder Vitalik Buterin previously stated his long-term goals for include making the blockchain quantum resistant. Theoretically, this involves forking the network to utilize a higher-order encryption algorithm that would require greater qubits to break.

Cointelegraph editor Jeffrey Albus contributed to this story. 

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

What New Rules Could Donald Trump Bring to Boost Bitcoin’s Growth?

The post What New Rules Could Donald Trump Bring to Boost Bitcoin’s Growth appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News The world is talking about the potential impact of Donald Trump’s

Binance to Support Optimism (OP) Network Upgrade & Hard Fork

The post Binance to Support Optimism (OP) Network Upgrade & Hard Fork appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Binance has announced that it will suspend deposits and withdrawals of tokens on

How Pig Butchering Scams Target Ethereum Investors and Steal Billions in 2024

The post How Pig Butchering Scams Target Ethereum Investors and Steal Billions in 2024 appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News The Pig Butchering scams turned out to be one of the most prevalent

Bitcoin Price Prediction 2025: Will BTC Surge to $200K Before Dropping to $50K?

The post Bitcoin Price Prediction 2025: Will BTC Surge to $200K Before Dropping to $50K appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News The global cryptocurrency market has taken a hit, with the market cap

Here’s When Bitcoin Price Will Hit $117,000

The post Here’s When Bitcoin Price Will Hit $117,000 appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Bitcoin surged to $998K yesterday before taking a nosedive at $95,484, shedding the profits of the

Top 10 AI-Based Altcoins To Invest in 2025

The post Top 10 AI-Based Altcoins To Invest in 2025 appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News In the rapidly evolving cryptocurrency industry, the Artificial Intelligence (AI) sector appears to be