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France to Phase Out Non-Quantum Encryption as Bitcoin Security Concerns Grow

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France will stop certifying non-quantum-resistant encryption by 2027, raising long-term security concerns for Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

France to Phase Out Non-Quantum Encryption as Bitcoin Security Concerns Grow

French authorities announced that government cybersecurity researchers will stop certifying security products that lack quantum-resistant encryption starting in 2027. The move signals growing regulatory attention to the threat quantum computing poses to current cryptographic standards, including those underpinning Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

For cryptocurrency traders, the announcement highlights a long-term risk to the security assumptions of blockchain networks. Bitcoin's elliptic curve cryptography (ECDSA) is among the algorithms that could be broken by a sufficiently powerful quantum computer. While practical quantum attacks remain years away, the French decision adds urgency to the industry's push for quantum-resistant upgrades. Live crypto prices and charts on NowPrice show that markets have not yet priced in this risk, but the topic is gaining traction among developers and security researchers.

Looking ahead, the crypto community will watch for similar regulatory moves from other jurisdictions. The timeline to 2027 gives blockchain projects time to implement post-quantum cryptography, but coordination across networks remains a challenge. Investors should monitor developments in quantum computing and any proposed hard forks or protocol upgrades aimed at quantum resistance.

Read the original article on Decrypt
Editorial summary by NowPrice. Read the original article at the source for full reporting.