A recent report from Project Eleven has raised significant concerns about the security of digital assets, projecting that over $3 trillion could be at risk of theft within the next four to seven years due to vulnerabilities in current cryptographic systems. This alarming insight comes amid the increasing interest in quantum computing, which poses a potential threat to the very foundations of digital asset security.
Project Eleven, which specializes in post-quantum security and asset migration, has partnered with the Solana Foundation to strengthen its network against impending quantum threats. The report emphasizes that a vast majority of digital assets, secured by elliptic curve digital signatures, face potential exploitation from powerful quantum computers capable of executing Shor’s algorithm. This algorithm allows for the derivation of private keys from public keys, enabling attackers to forge signatures and gain unauthorized access to wallets and other accounts.
The implications extend beyond cryptocurrencies, as the public-key cryptography used to secure assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and stablecoins is also essential for banking systems, cloud infrastructure, authentication networks, and even military communications. As such, the vulnerability poses a broad threat to various critical systems that rely on the same cryptographic methods.
Project Eleven’s comprehensive 110-page report claims that the phenomenon dubbed “Q-Day,” the arrival of quantum computers powerful enough to break existing encryption, could occur between 2030 and 2033. The urgency of this situation is underscored by the assertion that the migration to post-quantum cryptography could take five to ten years due to the complexities involved in transitioning large systems. This process would necessitate a coordinated, simultaneous effort among all players in the ecosystem, including users, exchanges, custodians, and miners.
The report identifies that the primary challenge is not technical but rather lies in the coordination, urgency, and commitment to undertake the costly migration. Historical examples, such as the Bitcoin SegWit upgrade, illustrate the sluggish pace and contentious nature of implementing even modest changes within blockchain networks.
Conor Deegan, the project’s CTO, along with CEO Alex Pruden, caution that the migration to a post-quantum framework could be more challenging than past upgrades like Taproot, which also faced significant delays due to political disagreements among stakeholders. The report calls attention to the possibility of “recycling” the estimated 5.6 to 6.9 million Bitcoin tokens vulnerable to quantum attacks—worth approximately $500 billion—back into the Bitcoin supply curve rather than allowing them to succumb to potential theft.
Ultimately, the findings ignite a complex discussion about the balance between Bitcoin’s fixed-supply principle and the imperative of safeguarding property rights against emerging technological threats. As the clock ticks down to a possible Q-Day, stakeholders in the digital asset industry face a critical juncture that could redefine security protocols and operational norms in the cryptocurrency landscape.


