Bitcoin holdings in El Salvador spread across new addresses
The shift highlights how emerging technologies and international pressure are reshaping the way El Salvador manages its bold bitcoin experiment.
El Salvador, the first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender, has restructured its national bitcoin holdings to strengthen security against potential future threats. The National Bitcoin Office (ONBTC) announced that the country’s 6,280 BTC, worth around $687 million, has been split across 14 new addresses, each holding no more than 500 BTC. Officials say this change reduces exposure to risks, including those that could arise from advances in quantum computing.
The concern stems from the possibility that quantum computers, once powerful enough, could break cryptographic protections and reveal private keys. While no such machine exists today, bitcoin developers have long debated the timeline of this threat. ONBTC also highlighted that avoiding address reuse improves security and privacy while allowing the government to maintain transparency.
The broader bitcoin community remains divided on the urgency of quantum risks. Some experts argue the issue is exaggerated, while others warn that the industry may have far less time than previously thought. A developer known as Hunter Beast recently cautioned that breakthroughs in IBM’s quantum experiments suggest the worst-case scenario could arrive within three years.
The bitcoin strategy of El Salvador continues to draw criticism from international institutions. The IMF, which approved a $3.5 billion loan to the country, insists that no new bitcoin purchases have been made this year and that the government is merely reshuffling its reserves. The ONBTC disputes this claim, maintaining that fresh purchases are still taking place despite pressure to scale back its cryptocurrency policies.
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