Upgrading Bitcoin to resist quantum algorithms is not difficult; the biggest problem lies in consensus.
Whether to retain Satoshi Nakamoto's coins, rewrite the underlying code for a hard fork, and lock up the coins of this founder is actually not too much. More importantly, the lost coins are estimated to be around 3 to 4 million pieces. Rewriting the code and destroying the founder's coins will shatter the long-standing consensus of Satoshi Nakamoto, making the upgraded Bitcoin a hybrid coin, even inferior to Doge.
Choosing to upgrade to resist quantum algorithms requires changing the current economic structural consensus; otherwise, no one can bear the trading volume of the surge, which is about 50 to 100 times. According to the current economic structural consensus, transaction fees would be 100 times more expensive than now, and transaction speeds would also be infinitely prolonged.
Those who have experienced 24 years of runes should know that at that time, extreme transaction fees were as high as 2,000 US dollars per transaction. If under extreme conditions, they become 100 times more expensive, that would be 200,000 US dollars per transaction.
For Bitcoin to transition smoothly to quantum resistance, it is not as simple as everyone thinks, unless Satoshi Nakamoto appears, it would be a bit easier.
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