As quantum computing becomes a frontline debate in Bitcoin circles, Strategy chairman Michael Saylor remains completely unfazed. While some investors and developers worry that machines capable of breaking Bitcoin’s encryption are just around the corner, Saylor sees yet another overhyped threat in a long history of them.
For young traders, this perspective matters. Bitcoin has survived countless “existential threats” government bans, exchange hacks, mining crackdowns, and now quantum fears. Each time, the network adapts and the price recovers.
The quantum concern is real in theory but distant in practice. Developers already discuss upgrade paths. The community will solve it, just as it has solved every previous challenge.
Saylor’s calm reflects a deeper truth: Bitcoin’s biggest strength isn’t its code. It’s the thousands of developers, miners, and holders committed to its survival. That human network adapts faster than any computer can break it. Those who understand this tend to hold through the fear.
