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Post-quantum cryptography is an active field of research and it is far more advanced than the current state of quantum cryptography. The NIST has just announced its selections of post-quantum algorithms (https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/...). While we do have a quite large amount of Qubits announced for the near future (IBM announced 1000 for this year), the error rate is far to high (https://doi.org/10.1038/...).
The other cryptographic "leg" of blockchain (hashes) are not really harmed by post-quantum cryptography.
If (current) asymmetric cryptography is broken, our problems would be far worse anyway, as the security properties of many real world protocols would be void.
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Cryptography aside, are the *current* problems of the so-called Web 3 even solvable? E.g. Trustworthy interaction with the "real" world (Sybil attacks, Oracles), the security of smart contracts (public attack surface together with difficult updates. -
the so called "web3.0" is nothing but a dazzling marketing term for the next wave of scam. _at best_.
at worst, it's a tech dystopia we should stop by all means necessary.
also: your iphone-analogy is surprisingly apt, since apple-fanboys will buy EVERYTHING anyway. no matter if the newer iphone is just a rebranded last-gen-one. they will buy. just like the blockchain-fans will allways follow the blockchain, even though it's already failling hard right now. -
ars140752yJust kill blockchain already please. The amount of MBAs and hold diggers that came to plague tech even more are all terrible.
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JsonBoa29832yTaking it out of the way: Web3.0 is most definitely just a marketing buzzword to cover up a scam, but we all know how vulnerable the most insipid parts of companies are to this sort of siren song.
Thus testing arguments on why it is impractical (without using the word "scam") is an worthy exercise.
Now, @sbiewald raises a very interesting point: Given that post-quantum cryptography is in such an advanced state, CA-based protocols (like GIT and HTTPS) could be upgraded by their industry leaders when needed. Just make it another major upgrade of Chrome or the Linux kernel something similar.
However, vendor-less 0-trust systems would have yet another bad time on coordinating a no-authority upgrade. Who would choose the exact algorithm? And it's implementation and deployment?
Besides the porting of the ledger itself, in the case of blockchains. Would the chain have to be started all over again, thus rendering the coins even more worthless, somehow?
Good answers beget more questions :) -
@JsonBoa The ledger "reversal protection" is based on a hash function. As long as data was valid back when a block was created, the transaction will remain valid. Nevertheless all assets of pre-quantum wallets should be transferred to post-quantum wallets before quantum computing.
Special transaction semantics can be added to the protocol to add post-quantum keys to an existing pre-quantum keypair.
The ledger format itself does not necessarily need to be changed for this, and backwards compatible extensions were introduced on large blockchains for quite a time - sometimes requiring a hard fork nonetheless.
The success of this extension is decided whether the majority of nodes implement this extension or not.
By the way: Git is not "CA based". It is a ledger (like a blockchain but without signatures and proof of ...) and transactions can be transferred over any channel (HTTP(S), SSH, any file system, Email, git wire protocol).
Related Rants
I've been reading about quantum computing in finance and other applications (fascinating read, althought really dense), but one question now won't stop bugging me.
Context:
1) Blockchain applications are based on NP-Hard asymmetric cryptographic problems, and how hard it is to solve such problems in a really short time.
2) So called "Web3.0" is based mostly on Blockchain applications, but would still need significant advances in order to be practical.
3) Affordable and practical cloud-based quantum computing is not so far in the future, and could be used to crack most NP-Hard problems in short (polynomial) time.
Thus, my question: Is Web3.0 obsolete before it even begun?
I mean, if quantum computing takes on fast enough, it could snuff out Blockchain applications by giving those a shelf life so short it wouldn't be worth to delevolp for it. It would be like announcing the iPhone 14 and the 15 on the same breath, saying the 15 is only a quarter away - why would anyone bother with the born-obsolete tech?
question
quantum computing
blockchain
web3.0