Key Takeaways
Bitcoin was designed to be decentralized, leaderless, and resistant to capture. No government controls it. No corporation owns it. Its development is open-source, volunteer-driven, and guided by rough consensus rather than executive mandate.
But what happens when some of the largest asset managers in the world accumulate meaningful stakes in the network and begin to worry that its core cryptography may one day be broken?
That is the tension venture capitalist Nic Carter recently highlighted on the Bits + Bips podcast. His warning was stark: if Bitcoin developers fail to move quickly enough to address potential quantum computing threats, large institutional holders, including BlackRock, could attempt to assert influence over the protocol’s direction.
Carter is co-founder of Castle Island Ventures, a venture capital firm focused on public blockchain companies and a partner and co-founder of Coin Metrics, a crypto data and analytics firm.
At the heart of this debate lies a complex question: Can institutions with fiduciary duties to shareholders pressure a decentralized network into upgrading faster than its volunteer developers deem prudent?
And more provocatively: Could BlackRock “take over” Bitcoin?
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) now holds approximately 3.8% of Bitcoin’s total supply. That makes it one of the largest known holders of BTC globally.
To put this into context:
When a single financial institution controls millions of coins on behalf of investors, it introduces a new dynamic into Bitcoin’s governance environment.
Bitcoin doesn’t have shareholders. It has node operators, miners, developers, and users. But large capital allocators bring something powerful: influence.
And influence becomes particularly relevant when risk emerges.
Bitcoin’s security relies on public-key cryptography, specifically elliptic-curve cryptography (ECDSA and, increasingly, Schnorr signatures). When a Bitcoin wallet is generated, it also bring:
As long as the private key remains secret, funds are secure. But quantum computers, in theory, could change this.
Shor’s algorithm demonstrates that a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could efficiently solve problems that are infeasible for classical computers, including the discrete logarithm problem underpinning Bitcoin’s cryptography.
In practical terms, a large-scale quantum computer could:
Dormant wallets are a particular concern. Many early Bitcoin addresses have exposed public keys, meaning that if quantum computing advances sufficiently, those coins could become vulnerable.
Roughly 25% of Bitcoin’s supply is believed to be dormant. If a quantum breakthrough allowed attackers to sweep these wallets, the economic shock would be significant.
Some market observers argue the quantum debate may already be affecting Bitcoin’s valuation narrative.
For more than a decade, Bitcoin steadily strengthened relative to gold, reinforcing the “digital gold” thesis. That long-term trend suggested Bitcoin should be valued significantly higher compared to the precious metal.
But critics claim that the trend has recently broken down and that awareness of quantum risk may be part of the reason.

According to this view, once the possibility of quantum attacks entered mainstream discourse, investors began pricing in tail risk. The argument goes further: Bitcoin should trade at a much stronger premium to gold, but lingering uncertainty around cryptographic longevity is suppressing that valuation.
Whether this interpretation is correct remains debated. Bitcoin’s price dynamics are influenced by macro conditions, liquidity cycles, regulatory developments, ETF flows, and geopolitical factors. Still, perception matters in markets. Even theoretical risks can alter sentiment.
The quantum discussion, therefore, is not just technical: it is psychological.
Developers are not ignoring the issue.
On Feb. 11, BIP-360 was merged, adding a new output type designed to support future post-quantum signature schemes.
This does not make Bitcoin quantum-proof today. Rather, it establishes infrastructure that could allow smoother migration if needed.
Bitcoin development is intentionally conservative:
Many core contributors argue that there is still time before quantum machines pose an existential threat and that rushing could introduce greater risks.
Nic Carter’s warning centers less on the cryptography itself and more on governance dynamics.
Bitcoin Core developers are independent contributors. They are not employees of BlackRock or ETF issuers.
But institutions have fiduciary duties. If they believe material risk is being ignored, they may not remain passive.
Carter suggests that if developers “do nothing,” major holders could attempt to influence direction, perhaps by funding alternative development teams, backing different client implementations, or advocating publicly for accelerated upgrades.
This would not be a corporate takeover in the traditional sense. Bitcoin has no CEO. But capital can shape ecosystems.
Any discussion of influence over Bitcoin development inevitably recalls the controversy surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s financial involvement in early crypto research circles.
With the release of Epstein File documents, it was revealed that Epstein had donated to institutions connected to Bitcoin research, including the MIT Media Lab’s Digital Currency Initiative (DCI), which has supported Bitcoin Core contributors. Some developer salaries were indirectly funded through these donations, sparking backlash across the community.
It’s important to clarify that Epstein did not control Bitcoin Core, direct protocol decisions, or influence network governance. His involvement was limited to financial contributions that supported research and development activities.
Still, the episode raised broader concerns about how open-source Bitcoin development is funded. Core contributors are typically supported by a mix of nonprofits, academic institutions, grants, and private companies. While this decentralized funding model reduces the risk of centralized control, it can also create reputational and transparency challenges.
For critics worried about institutional capture, the controversy highlighted how capital can enter the ecosystem without formal authority. For defenders, it reinforced a key principle: funding does not equal governance. Protocol changes still require broad technical consensus and network adoption.
Governance tensions are not limited to quantum risk.
Another recent flashpoint involves Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 110 (BIP-110), aimed at reducing so-called Ordinals-like “spam” on the network.
The proposal, introduced by pseudonymous developer Dathon Ohm in December, seeks to temporarily shrink the amount of data allowed in transactions. Its goal is to reduce images, videos, audio, and other non-monetary data being inscribed onto the blockchain.
Nearly 7.5% of Bitcoin nodes, all running the Bitcoin Knots client, have signaled readiness for BIP-110.
Blockstream CEO Adam Back has strongly opposed the proposal.
While acknowledging that Bitcoin should function as “sound money,” Back warned that implementing BIP-110 at the consensus level could damage Bitcoin’s credibility as a neutral monetary network.

He described the effort as “a lynch mob attempt to push changes there is not consensus for,” arguing that spam is “just an annoyance” rather than a security threat.
The Ordinals debate illustrates a broader theme: attempts to use consensus changes to enforce policy preferences can fracture social cohesion.
For institutions watching from the sidelines, repeated governance battles may raise concerns about stability.
Bitcoin governance operates through:
Any major change requires broad agreement.
The blocksize wars of 2015-2017 demonstrated that economic weight alone cannot dictate protocol rules. Corporate-backed proposals were rejected when grassroots consensus failed to materialize.
However, today’s environment is different.
Institutional ownership via ETFs represents unprecedented capital concentration. If large holders coordinate around a specific roadmap, they could influence miners, infrastructure providers, and public discourse.
Still, unilateral control remains unlikely. Nodes ultimately determine which version of Bitcoin is recognized as legitimate.
Several counterarguments temper the urgency narrative:
Developers emphasize that premature or poorly designed upgrades could introduce vulnerabilities worse than the threat itself.
In other words, caution is not complacency: it may be prudence.
Could BlackRock “take over” Bitcoin? Not in a traditional sense.
But influence is different from control. Large institutions can:
The greater risk may not be corporate domination, but fragmentation.
If developers and capital holders diverge sharply on quantum preparedness, the result could be:
Bitcoin’s strength lies in social consensus. That consensus must balance technical rigor with economic reality.
Nic Carter’s warning is not a prediction of imminent collapse. It is a reminder that Bitcoin’s evolution now unfolds in an institutional era.
Quantum computing poses a theoretical threat. Developers are aware and taking incremental steps, including BIP-360.
Meanwhile, governance tensions, from quantum preparedness to Ordinals policy fights, reveal a network negotiating its identity.
Is Bitcoin purely grassroots and developer-led? Or does capital inevitably gain influence as adoption scales?
The answer may define the next decade.
Quantum computers may still be years away from posing an existential danger.
But the governance debate about how to prepare, and who gets to decide, has already begun.
Nic Carter warned that large institutional holders, such as BlackRock, could lose patience if Bitcoin developers do not move quickly enough to address potential quantum computing threats. In an extreme scenario, he suggested institutions might try to influence development direction by backing alternative teams or proposals. Not in a traditional corporate sense. Bitcoin has no CEO, board, or ownership structure. Control ultimately rests with node operators, miners, and users who choose which software to run. However, large institutions can influence the ecosystem through funding, public advocacy, and economic weight. Bitcoin relies on elliptic curve cryptography (ECDSA and Schnorr signatures). In theory, a sufficiently powerful quantum computer running Shor’s algorithm could derive private keys from public keys, potentially compromising certain wallets. BIP-110 is a proposal aimed at limiting non-monetary data (such as images and videos via Ordinals inscriptions) stored on Bitcoin. Blockstream CEO Adam Back opposed it, arguing that making consensus changes without broad agreement could damage Bitcoin’s credibility. The debate highlights broader tensions around who influences protocol changes.