ARTICLE AD BOX
- Bitcoin private key duplication is nearly impossible, with odds of 1 in 1.4 quindecillion due to cryptographic complexity.
- Advanced quantum computing could pose future risks to blockchain security, but solutions like quantum-resistant algorithms are being developed.
The slogan “Not your keys, not your coins” has become a cryptocurrency industry standard, underscoring the crucial role of private keys in securing Bitcoin holdings.
The apparently arbitrary creation of wallet addresses begs an interesting issue, though: is it feasible for one user to create the exact identical wallet address and private key as another user? Let’s examine the facts, odds, and technological protections that almost certainly make this impossible, based on the CoinGecko video.
The Role of Private Keys in Blockchain Security
Created alongside a blockchain address, a private key is a sophisticated alphabetic string. Accessing and authorising transactions from the linked address requires this key. It serves as a special password, giving only access to the wallet’s contents. Private keys, to be clear, are not like seed phrases.
A seed phrase acts as a master key, unlocking several addresses, like accessing an entire collection of mailboxes, while a private key unlocks a specific address—much like a key for a single mailbox.
The Impossibility of Duplicate Bitcoin Wallet Addresses
Wallet addresses and their matching private keys are generated randomly; hence, theoretically, two users might produce exactly the same credentials.
Still, there is astronomically little chance of this happening. From 2^160, the total number of possible wallet addresses for Bitcoin is 1 in 1.4 quindecillion—a value denoted by 14 followed by 47 zeros. This degree of randomness guarantees that the probability of repeating an address is so low that it can be considered essentially impossible.
It would take around 137 quadrillion years to reach a mere 50% chance of colliding with an existing address, even if someone were to use a hypercomputer capable of producing one billion addresses each hour. In terms of perspective, this period is far longer than the 13.8 billion-year age of the universe.
The Near-Impossibility of Targeting Funded Bitcoin Wallet
The chances are only slightly better for a malevolent actor seeking to create a private key matching a wallet with genuine funds. Chainalysis estimates that there were around 172 million Bitcoin addresses with possible money capacity as of 2018.
But most of these, 147 million, belonged to companies like exchanges and enterprises that frequently use multi-signature wallets, needing several private keys for access. There are just 25 million addresses linked to individual Bitcoin owners left.
The odds of producing a private key matching one of these financed wallets stand at 1 in 5.8 nonillion when one considers the total number of conceivable wallet addresses—over 1.4 trillion.
It would take an estimated 667 quadrillion years to find a single matching address even with enhanced computational capacity—that of a hypercomputer processing a billion addresses every hour. This computation ignores the outrageous expenses of hardware, storage, and energy needed to run such a system.
Quantum Computing and the Future of Bitcoin Security
Although private key duplication almost makes theft of Bitcoin virtually impossible with current technology, the development of quantum computing raises a possible threat to blockchain security.
With their great computing capability, quantum computers may theoretically break cryptographic systems significantly more quickly than traditional computers. To proactively address this threat, though, the Bitcoin network and other blockchain systems are aggressively investigating and creating quantum-resistant algorithms.
Like most Bitcoin wallets globally, the 100 BTC jackpot famously connected with one of Satoshi Nakamoto’s early wallets is safely out of reach. The improbability of creating duplicate private keys guarantees Bitcoin stays safe within the present technological paradigm.
Nevertheless, the blockchain community has to be alert and aggressive in changing its cryptographic protections as quantum computing develops. Right now, owners of Bitcoin can relax knowing their holdings are probabilistically safe against illegal access.