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Elliptic Curve Cryptography

All articles tagged with #elliptic curve cryptography

Public quantum computer cracks 15-bit elliptic curve key, wins 1 BTC bounty
technology1 month ago

Public quantum computer cracks 15-bit elliptic curve key, wins 1 BTC bounty

Independent researcher Giancarlo Lelli used a publicly accessible quantum computer to derive a 15-bit elliptic-curve private key, in what Project Eleven calls the largest quantum attack on elliptic-curve cryptography to date; Lelli was awarded a 1 BTC bounty under Project Eleven's Q-Day program. The result, while noteworthy, operates far below the 256-bit security used by Bitcoin and shouldn't be considered a threat to real-world crypto yet. It follows a 6-bit break demonstrated in 2025 by Steve Tippeconnic on IBM's 133-qubit quantum computer, which Project Eleven says Lelli's 15-bit result expands by a factor of 512. Project Eleven argues the gap from 15-bit to 256-bit keys is shrinking as an engineering challenge, while security experts remain divided on how quickly quantum hardware could scale. The article also notes about 6.9 million bitcoin wallets have visible on-chain public keys, highlighting urgency for migration to post-quantum cryptography.

Quantum Time Bomb: Crypto Could Be Cracked Sooner Than We Realize
technology1 month ago

Quantum Time Bomb: Crypto Could Be Cracked Sooner Than We Realize

Advances in quantum hardware and algorithms are shrinking the resources needed to break common encryption, notably elliptic-curve cryptography; while no immediate catastrophe is expected, experts urge migration to quantum-safe cryptography, with standards bodies like NIST aiming for widespread adoption by the mid-2030s and some regions piloting early post-quantum protections today.

Quantum race tightens the window on cryptography
technology1 month ago

Quantum race tightens the window on cryptography

Advances in quantum hardware and faster quantum algorithms are lowering the resources needed to crack widely used cryptography, including elliptic-curve and blockchain-based systems. While there’s no immediate catastrophe, standards bodies (like NIST) and industry players are accelerating post-quantum migrations and deploying hybrid protections, with broad adoption expected by the 2030s as the risk of a practical quantum attack grows.