Wednesday, February 4, 2026
DIGESTWIRE
Contribute
CONTACT US
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Breaking News
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health Care
  • Business
  • Sports
    • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
  • Defense
  • Crypto
    • Crypto News
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Coins Marketcap
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Blog
  • Founders
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Breaking News
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health Care
  • Business
  • Sports
    • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
  • Defense
  • Crypto
    • Crypto News
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Coins Marketcap
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Blog
  • Founders
No Result
View All Result
DIGESTWIRE
No Result
View All Result
Home Blockchain

Bitcoin Quantum Panic Flares As Nic Carter And Developer Matt Corallo Clash

by DigestWire member
February 4, 2026
in Blockchain, Crypto Market, Cryptocurrency
0
Bitcoin Quantum Panic Flares As Nic Carter And Developer Matt Corallo Clash
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A fresh bout of “quantum panic” broke out across Bitcoin X on Tuesday after Castle Island’s Nic Carter and longtime Bitcoin developer Matt Corallo sparred over whether the ecosystem is treating post-quantum security as an urgent protocol priority or a speculative distraction. The exchange landed on a familiar Bitcoin fault line: decentralized development culture versus the market’s appetite for visible coordination and timelines.

The flare-up began with a prompt from Kellan Grenier, who said he wished a “Tier 1 custodian” would partner with Castle Island to “spin up a Quantum Resistance BTC dev tiger team,” arguing there’s a “building wall of worry” that needs to be addressed “head on by reputable forces.” Corallo shot back that prominent Bitcoin developers have been “hard at work on QC for a while,” rejecting the premise that the space is asleep at the wheel.

Post-Quantum Bitcoin Plan Debate Heats Up

Carter disagreed sharply, arguing that scattered individual efforts don’t address the core bottleneck in Bitcoin upgrades: social consensus among the small set of developers and institutions who typically “set pace” for changes that actually ship and get adopted.

He pointed to Bitcoin’s historical upgrade cadence, saying the last two major upgrades took “7–8 years from first proposal to meaningful adoption on chain,” and added that the only named Bitcoin Improvement Proposal he cited as “pertaining to quantum,” BIP360, “has not been co-signed by any major dev,” describing it as “only a first of many, many steps that need to be made.”

Carter’s central claim was that Bitcoin can’t afford to wait for cryptographically relevant quantum computers to be demonstrably real before mobilizing, because the migration burden is asymmetric and slow. “And no, you cannot just ‘wait until CRQCs are real’ to act,” he wrote. “You need to act with a 5–10 year lead time. So if you think QCs might exist in 2035, you need to start acting now.”

He framed the risk in operational terms: custodians, exchanges, and individual holders would need to rotate keys across the entire network within a finite window or face catastrophic loss. He repeatedly linked to his essays arguing quantum timelines are accelerating and that Bitcoin developers should treat the threat proactively.

Corallo rejected both the tone and the factual framing, accusing Carter of manufacturing fear and ignoring ongoing institutional work. “Man you seriously need to stop talking out of your ass,” Corallo wrote, disputing the characterization of post-quantum work as “minuscule” and “scattered.”

He argued that “the top two Bitcoin developer institutions (Blockstream Research and Chaincode) each [have] several people working hard on what a post-quantum Bitcoin upgrade should look like,” and said he has not heard influential developers dismiss quantum as “only driven by investors” or “hype.”

Sleepwalking Or FUD?

The argument also rewound to 2021 debates around Taproot. Carter claimed quantum concerns were raised then and dismissed, calling the risk “far more urgent since.” Corallo countered that Carter was misrepresenting the earlier discussion: “The concern that was dismissed is that taproot made it materially worse, not that there was no risk and that there would never be any risk,” he wrote, adding that he still believes that narrower claim is correct.

As the thread escalated, Carter argued that Bitcoin’s culture of obscured influence and informal governance makes accountability difficult even when the stakes are existential. “There has been turnover in core dev, there has been a deliberate attempt to disguise who is a core dev for liability reasons, and because the most influential bitcoin devs try to keep their importance obscure,” he wrote, suggesting that outsiders can’t easily verify where “consensus” actually sits.

Corallo’s rebuttal was that the work exists, even if it doesn’t present as a public campaign. “That is what it looks like when devs take a problem seriously — research into available options, new cryptographic primitives that are better for Bitcoin than available standard PQC options,” he wrote, arguing that absence of conference-stage messaging is not evidence of inactivity.

A key technical disagreement surfaced late in the exchange: whether post-quantum safety would require essentially every user to migrate. After Carter told another developer it was “a lot more complicated than a simple patch” because “every user individually” would need to migrate “in a finite period of time,” Corallo responded: “No it doesn’t. If you have a wallet derived from a seedphrase, that is actually fine (assuming unsafe spend paths are disabled).”

Christine D. Kim, founder of Protocol Watch, jumped in to argue that Carter’s comparisons to councils and roadmaps in other ecosystems miss Bitcoin’s structure. Bitcoin “isn’t a company,” she wrote, and post-quantum discussions already occur through the usual venues — “the mailing list, IRC meetings, delving bitcoin”, adding that what Carter cited elsewhere can be “marketing… it’s just more centralized.”

At press time, BTC traded at $76,268.

Bitcoin price chart

Read Entire Article
Tags: BitcoinistBlockchainCoin Surges
Share30Tweet19
Next Post
XRP Derivatives Paint a Cautious Picture as Price Stalls Under $1.65

XRP Derivatives Paint a Cautious Picture as Price Stalls Under $1.65

Bitcoin price sets new 15-month low under $73K as crypto liquidates $800M

Why Is Crypto Market Going DownToday?

Why Is Crypto Market Going DownToday?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

No Result
View All Result
Coins MarketCap Live Updates Coins MarketCap Live Updates Coins MarketCap Live Updates
ADVERTISEMENT

Highlights

Why Is Crypto Market Going DownToday?

Bitcoin price sets new 15-month low under $73K as crypto liquidates $800M

XRP Derivatives Paint a Cautious Picture as Price Stalls Under $1.65

Bitcoin Quantum Panic Flares As Nic Carter And Developer Matt Corallo Clash

Analyst Predicts XRP Price Wil Target 450% Rally To $7

L2 Builders Join Discourse on Buterin’s Scaling Model as $HYPER Brings SVM Speed to $BTC

Trending

Comedians revealed for new Saturday Night Live UK series
Entertainment

Comedians revealed for new Saturday Night Live UK series

by DigestWire member
February 4, 2026
0

Saturday Night Live has announced the comedians cast for the first UK incarnation of the hit late-night...

TRON Network Integrated by CoolWallet to Deliver Lower-Cost, High-Speed Transactions With Full Self-Custody

TRON Network Integrated by CoolWallet to Deliver Lower-Cost, High-Speed Transactions With Full Self-Custody

February 4, 2026
White House sets February deadline to settle $6.6 trillion fight between Coinbase and banks

White House sets February deadline to settle $6.6 trillion fight between Coinbase and banks

February 4, 2026
Why Is Crypto Market Going DownToday?

Why Is Crypto Market Going DownToday?

February 4, 2026

Bitcoin price sets new 15-month low under $73K as crypto liquidates $800M

February 4, 2026
DIGEST WIRE

DigestWire is an automated news feed that utilizes AI technology to gather information from sources with varying perspectives. This allows users to gain a comprehensive understanding of different arguments and make informed decisions. DigestWire is dedicated to serving the public interest and upholding democratic values.

Privacy Policy     Terms and Conditions

Recent News

  • Comedians revealed for new Saturday Night Live UK series February 4, 2026
  • TRON Network Integrated by CoolWallet to Deliver Lower-Cost, High-Speed Transactions With Full Self-Custody February 4, 2026
  • White House sets February deadline to settle $6.6 trillion fight between Coinbase and banks February 4, 2026

Categories

  • Blockchain
  • Blog
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Cricket
  • Crypto Market
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Defense
  • Entertainment
  • Football
  • Founders
  • Health Care
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Strange
  • Technology
  • UK News
  • Uncategorized
  • US News
  • World

© 2020-23 Digest Wire. All rights belong to their respective owners.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • US
  • Breaking News
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health Care
  • Business
  • Sports
    • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
  • Defense
  • Crypto
    • Crypto News
    • Crypto Calculator
    • Blockchain
    • Coins Marketcap
    • Top Gainers and Loser of the day
    • Crypto Exchanges
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Strange
  • Blog
  • Founders
  • Contribute!

© 2024 Digest Wire - All right reserved.

Privacy Policy   Terms and Conditions

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.