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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

BIP-361: Bitcoin Developers Want to Freeze Satoshi's Wallet. They Might Be Right. They Might Be Wrong.

BIP361 Bitcoin Developers Want to Freeze Satoshis Wallet They Might Be Right The

Nobody has a clean answer on this one. Including me.

What Is a BIP?

BIP stands for Bitcoin Improvement Proposal — the formal process for suggesting changes to the Bitcoin protocol. Anyone can write one. It only becomes reality if miners, node operators, and developers reach broad consensus to adopt it.

BIP-361 is not adopted yet. But the debate it's triggering already is.

The Setup

This week, Bitcoin developers proposed BIP-361 — a protocol change that would permanently freeze all addresses from Bitcoin's earliest era before quantum computers can crack them.

We're talking about wallets from 2010-2011. Dormant coins. Lost Bitcoin. And Satoshi Nakamoto's estimated 1 million BTC that hasn't moved in over 15 years.

The proposal exists because of a real vulnerability. Early Bitcoin addresses used a format called P2PK that permanently exposes the public key. Modern quantum computers can't exploit this. Future ones will. The developers behind BIP-361 want to act before that future arrives.

What happens next is genuinely unclear — and anyone who tells you they know is guessing.

The Danger They're Trying to Prevent

Quantum computing is advancing. Not at science fiction speed, but at uncomfortable speed.

IBM, Google, and state-level programs are building machines that will eventually be capable of reversing the math that protects early Bitcoin addresses. The current estimate puts that capability years away — but years is not never.

When that day comes, roughly 4 million BTC sitting in vulnerable addresses become targets. Including Satoshi's. A state actor with quantum capability and the motivation to destabilize Bitcoin's credibility would have a single window to drain coins that have been untouched since Bitcoin cost less than a pizza.

The market impact of that event isn't just financial. It's existential. Bitcoin has survived every attack on its price. It has never faced an attack on its origin story. Satoshi's coins being drained — by anyone, for any reason — would be a different kind of blow.

That's the danger BIP-361 is trying to prevent. It's real. It's not paranoia.

The Danger They're Creating

Here's what keeps me up at night about this proposal.

Bitcoin works because the rules don't bend. Not for governments. Not for banks. Not for emergencies. The value of "nobody can touch your coins" comes entirely from it being absolute. The moment it has exceptions — even reasonable ones — it becomes a negotiation.

BIP-361 introduces the first exception.

Today the justification is quantum computing. That's technically grounded and hard to argue with. But the precedent isn't about today's justification. It's about what the community just agreed was possible.

After BIP-361, the answer to "can the protocol freeze addresses" is yes. Under extreme enough circumstances, yes. And extreme circumstances have a way of multiplying once you've established they justify exceptions.

Sanctioned wallets. Stolen coins. Politically sensitive addresses. Every future proposal that wants to touch something it shouldn't will point to the day Bitcoin decided immutability has a limit.

That's not hypothetical fearmongering. That's how every financial system that started with good intentions ended up where it ended up.

The Part Where I Don't Give You a Clean Answer

Both dangers are real.

Do nothing — and you're betting that quantum computers won't advance fast enough, that no state actor will get there first, and that the market can survive the psychological blow of watching Satoshi's coins move after 15 years of silence.

Act now — and you're betting that developers can be trusted with a precedent that has never existed before, that the community will hold the line on future proposals, and that protecting Bitcoin from external threats is worth introducing an internal one.

I genuinely don't know which bet is right. I'm not sure anyone does.

What I do know is that this debate matters more than the price chart right now. The arguments made on both sides over the next months will define what Bitcoin actually is — not what the whitepaper says, but what the people who run it believe it to be.

Watch this one carefully.


The Argument Against Freezing

The case for BIP-361 is technical and straightforward. The case against it is philosophical and cuts to the heart of what Bitcoin actually is.

Bitcoin's core promise is that nobody can touch your coins without your keys. No government, no developer, no consensus mechanism. That promise is what separates Bitcoin from every other monetary system in history. BIP-361 asks the network to make an exception. The justification is quantum risk. The precedent it sets is something else entirely.

Once the network accepts that coins can be frozen based on a future threat, the question becomes who decides what qualifies as a sufficient threat next time. Quantum computers are real. But the argument that the network should preemptively freeze 1 million BTC that might belong to Satoshi, might be permanently lost, or might be held by early cypherpunks who valued exactly this kind of property protection, requires a level of trust in developer consensus that Bitcoin was explicitly designed to avoid.

The five year migration window proposed alongside BIP-361 is reasonable in theory. In practice, a meaningful portion of those 6.5 million BTC are genuinely lost. Dead holders. Forgotten seed phrases. Coins that moved into wallets in 2010 and will never move again for reasons that have nothing to do with quantum risk. Freezing them permanently is not protecting Bitcoin. It is destroying property that belongs to someone, even if that someone is unreachable.

The honest answer is that this debate has no clean resolution. The quantum threat is real. The property rights argument is also real. Bitcoin will have to choose between them eventually, and that choice will define what kind of network it actually is.

The BitBrainers Take

Satoshi disappeared at exactly the right moment. No face, no company, no wallet anyone could negotiate with.

Now developers want to freeze that wallet to protect it.

The most decentralized financial system ever built is about to have a very centralized conversation about whose coins are safe to touch. Whatever the community decides — that decision will echo for a long time.

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