No, first of all they are qualitatively different. Not all targets are the same. At best you could attack whatever the largest input in your current mempool is, perhaps a few dozen bitcoins at most. Whereas if you could choose your targets, something like this is better:
Second, it doesn’t change the fact that you’d still have this insanely powerful quantum supercomputer running for millions of years before you have a chance at double-spending a single coin. Not economically viable as I said before.
Second, it doesn’t change the fact that you’d still have this insanely powerful quantum supercomputer running for millions of years before you have a chance at double-spending a single coin. Not economically viable as I said before.
Various people do consider ECDSA to be effectively broken with quantum computers. It’s hard to estimate what a quantum computer of a certain power is going to cost in 20 years.
That said, I don’t need to capture enough coins to pay for the attack. I can buy options on failing bitcoin price and attack. If it’s known that there’s an attacker who randomly hijacks transactions the bitcoin price takes a blow.
No, first of all they are qualitatively different. Not all targets are the same. At best you could attack whatever the largest input in your current mempool is, perhaps a few dozen bitcoins at most. Whereas if you could choose your targets, something like this is better:
http://blockchain.info/address/1933phfhK3ZgFQNLGSDXvqCn32k2buXY8a
Second, it doesn’t change the fact that you’d still have this insanely powerful quantum supercomputer running for millions of years before you have a chance at double-spending a single coin. Not economically viable as I said before.
Various people do consider ECDSA to be effectively broken with quantum computers. It’s hard to estimate what a quantum computer of a certain power is going to cost in 20 years.
That said, I don’t need to capture enough coins to pay for the attack. I can buy options on failing bitcoin price and attack. If it’s known that there’s an attacker who randomly hijacks transactions the bitcoin price takes a blow.