CZ called for freezing Satoshi's 1.1 million BTC to prevent quantum theft, sparking a fierce debate among Bitcoin experts over whether to sacrifice.CZ called for freezing Satoshi's 1.1 million BTC to prevent quantum theft, sparking a fierce debate among Bitcoin experts over whether to sacrifice.

CZ Urges Freezing Satoshi’s Bitcoin Over Quantum Threat — Bitcoin Experts Split on Immutability

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com
bitcoin21 main

Bitcoin’s oldest unsolved vulnerability has collided with its most sacred principle, and one of the loudest voices in the room wants a drastic fix. Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao argued over the July 4 weekend that Satoshi Nakamoto’s estimated 1.1 million bitcoin stash should be frozen before sufficiently advanced quantum computers can move it—or steal it. The proposal landed like a sledgehammer in a debate that had simmered for years.

The argument, detailed in a CoinDesk report, is not merely technical. It directly pits Bitcoin’s immutability—the guarantee that on-chain ownership cannot be altered retroactively—against a future security crisis that some researchers believe could materialize within a decade. For CZ, freezing the coins now, before a quantum attacker could derive the private keys from public keys exposed in early pay-to-public-key transactions, is a pragmatic choice. For many core developers and maximalists, it is heresy.

The Immutability Debate Reignites

The Satoshi coins are a special case. They sit behind cryptographic keys that pre-date modern address formats, making them especially vulnerable to quantum attacks that can solve the discrete logarithm problem. If a quantum adversary moved even a fraction of that hoard, it would flood the market and shatter confidence. Yet the fix—a network-wide soft fork to render those coins unspendable—would require overwhelming consensus and set a precedent for freezing anyone’s bitcoin under the right set of justifications.

This is not the first time the community has debated altering the ledger. The 2016 Ethereum DAO fork led to a chain split and remains the defining cautionary tale. Bitcoin avoided that path, at great cost to the minority chain, precisely to uphold the principle that code and ownership history are final. CZ’s suggestion revisits that boundary, but with a novel urgency: the quantum clock.

Quantum Computing: A Real but Distant Threat

A quantum computer capable of breaking Bitcoin’s secp256k1 elliptic curve does not exist today. Estimates vary wildly on when it might. IBM’s roadmaps and Google’s milestones show progress but remain orders of magnitude short of the millions of logical qubits needed. Still, the timeline is narrowing. Advances in error correction and qubit scaling have pushed some forecasts to the late 2030s, which for a settlement layer that aspires to multigenerational permanence is uncomfortably close.

Freezing the Satoshi supply would be a brute-force stopgap. More elegant solutions exist: a network upgrade to post-quantum signature schemes, which researchers and standards bodies are actively shaping. But a protocol-level migration would require every holder to move funds to new addresses—an operation that, if delayed too long, could itself be beaten by quantum speed. The Satoshi coins complicate that migration because nobody can sign for them.

That is the crux of CZ’s argument. If Satoshi is deceased or has lost the keys, those coins will never move voluntarily. Their public keys are exposed, making them a honeypot. A quantum thief would not need to negotiate a soft fork; they would simply take the coins, instantly creating the most chaotic supply event in Bitcoin’s history.

Market and Governance Fallout

Even the mere discussion of freezing coins reverberates through market structure. Traders and institutional custodians watch governance debates closely, because any consensus-based alteration of the UTXO set erodes the analog to a sovereign monetary policy. A precedent that coins can be frozen to preempt theft might, in the wrong hands, become a wedge for state-level intervention. The line between protecting the network and breaking its neutrality is thin.

That same tension is playing out in Washington, as the ongoing legislative battle over crypto market structure pits traditional banks against industry-backed compromises. When the largest exchange founder publicly advocates altering the ledger, it blurs the boundary between voluntary consensus and external pressure. Regulators will almost certainly note the conversation.

Miners and nodes would have the final say. A soft fork to freeze specific UTXOs would require an overwhelming majority to activate. If it fails, Bitcoin retains its immutability but carries the quantum risk. If it succeeds, it broadcasts a signal that the network can be engineered to solve specific, high-stakes edge cases—a message that both excites and terrifies different corners of the market.

What remains wholly uncertain is whether the debate will accelerate adoption of quantum-resistant cryptography rather than stopgap measures. Developer resources and attention are finite. The community’s ability to coordinate under a known, ticking threat has never been tested. CZ’s statement may not decide the outcome, but it has already forced the conversation out of niche developer circles and onto the main stage.

No software proposal has been formally drafted, and no immediate protocol change is expected. Still, the split among experts underscores a deeper question that Bitcoin will have to answer this decade: whether the ledger is an immutable record, or a system that can be adapted to survive existential threats. The Satoshi hoard, sitting silently on the chain, now represents the most expensive philosophical stress test in crypto.

Market Opportunity
The Final Form Bull Logo
The Final Form Bull Price(CZ)
$0.05053
$0.05053$0.05053
+573.73%
USD
The Final Form Bull (CZ) Live Price Chart

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

World Cup Combo: Aim for 200xWorld Cup Combo: Aim for 200x

Combine up to 20 World Cup matches in one order

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

PMI-ACP Exam Preparation: How to Use a Simulator and Practice Questions Effectively

PMI-ACP Exam Preparation: How to Use a Simulator and Practice Questions Effectively

Understanding the PMI-ACP Exam Structure The PMI-ACP exam is designed to evaluate how well candidates apply agile principles in real-world project environments
Share
Techbullion2026/04/02 18:32
Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC

Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC

The post Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson has weighed in on whether the Federal Reserve should make a 25 basis points (bps) Fed rate cut or 50 bps cut. This comes ahead of the Fed decision today at today’s FOMC meeting, with the market pricing in a 25 bps cut. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market are currently trading flat ahead of the rate cut decision. Franklin Templeton CEO Weighs In On Potential FOMC Decision In a CNBC interview, Jenny Johnson said that she expects the Fed to make a 25 bps cut today instead of a 50 bps cut. She acknowledged the jobs data, which suggested that the labor market is weakening. However, she noted that this data is backward-looking, indicating that it doesn’t show the current state of the economy. She alluded to the wage growth, which she remarked is an indication of a robust labor market. She added that retail sales are up and that consumers are still spending, despite inflation being sticky at 3%, which makes a case for why the FOMC should opt against a 50-basis-point Fed rate cut. In line with this, the Franklin Templeton CEO said that she would go with a 25 bps rate cut if she were Jerome Powell. She remarked that the Fed still has the October and December FOMC meetings to make further cuts if the incoming data warrants it. Johnson also asserted that the data show a robust economy. However, she noted that there can’t be an argument for no Fed rate cut since Powell already signaled at Jackson Hole that they were likely to lower interest rates at this meeting due to concerns over a weakening labor market. Notably, her comment comes as experts argue for both sides on why the Fed should make a 25 bps cut or…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:36
Silver price today: falls on April 2

Silver price today: falls on April 2

The post Silver price today: falls on April 2 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Silver prices (XAG/USD) fell on Thursday, according to FXStreet data. Silver
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/04/02 17:55

$5M in SPCX Positions for Free

$5M in SPCX Positions for Free$5M in SPCX Positions for Free

0 fees, 100x leverage, daily prizes, 7K+ stocks/ETFs