Google’s ‘Quantum Money’ could render blockchain unnecessary

Source Cryptopolitan

Google AI researchers and academics from the University of Texas at Austin and the Czech Academy of Sciences are working on a system labelled “quantum money,” a form of currency secured by the unalterable laws of physics.

Google’s Quantum AI division has revived a decades-old concept that could upend the foundations of digital currency, embedded in ledger-based blockchain technology. 

According to the work detailed in a new study titled “Anonymous Quantum Tokens with Classical Verification,” digital money can exist securely without relying on the technology that Bitcoin and most cryptocurrencies currently use.

Blockchain’s core principle rivaled by quantum money

Since Bitcoin’s whitepaper was released more than ten years ago, blockchain technology has provided the architecture for the global digital currency ecosystem. Its distributed ledger records every transaction permanently and transparently, preventing counterfeiting and double-spending automatically, out of control of any central entity. 

However, Google’s new quantum framework could render that complex infrastructure unnecessary. “Quantum money” reportedly solves the same fundamental problem of making sure digital tokens cannot be duplicated or forged, but does so through quantum mechanics. 

The concept rests on a quantum theory known as the no-cloning theorem, which states that it is physically impossible to make an exact copy of an unknown quantum state. If a unit of currency were represented as a quantum state, any attempt to duplicate it would fail.

“If you had a $1 bill that was actually a quantum state, you could prove, based on the properties of quantum mechanics, that copying such a state is impossible. You could only succeed with very small probability,” said Dar Gilboa, a Google Quantum AI researcher and co-author of the study.

Quantum technology revisits a 1960s vision

The idea of quantum security was first proposed in 1969 by physicist Stephen Wiesner, who broadly explained a method for minting “private-key quantum money” that could not be counterfeited. 

Wiesner’s paper, published in 1983, imagined each banknote as a unique quantum state paired with a serial number, which only the issuing mint could verify. He kick-started an interest that led to more developments, which studied the possibility of public-key quantum money, or tokens that anyone could verify without consulting the issuer. 

However, models, including those proposed by theoretical computer scientist Scott Aaronson, were less actionable and largely insecure. Researchers have since diverted to “collision-free” schemes where each quantum bill has a unique serial number that not even the mint could duplicate, preventing over-issuance of currency.

“We’re not solving the same problem,” Gilboa said. “What we’re doing isn’t decentralized, so it’s not really an analog of cryptocurrencies in any strong sense. The no-cloning theorem gives us hope that quantum information could be used as the basis of a better kind of money.

The Google proposal discusses having a trusted central issuer, such as a bank or government institution, responsible for creating and validating quantum tokens. Much different from today’s fiat systems, the issuer would have no ability to track how the money circulates. 

Users can perform a “swap test” on their tokens to detect if the issuer is secretly tagging or tracing them. “If they’re not identical, that means the bank could be tracking you. Any attempt by the bank to secretly tag its money would be instantly revealed,” Gilboa explained.

In late October, Google’s quantum research team announced that its latest quantum computer had achieved a computational breakthrough, executing a task beyond the capabilities of classical machines.

The algorithm computed the structure of a molecule and ran 13,000 times faster than conventional computers, demonstrating what scientists call “quantum advantage.” 

Quantum technology has its promises, but more limitations

According to Winfried Hensinger, professor of quantum technologies at the University of Sussex, the experiment achieved a task that is clearly impossible for classical machines, but it is not quite there yet when it comes to real-world applications.

Even Google admitted that practical quantum computers, capable of performing large-scale computations and supporting technologies like quantum money, are still years away. Fully fault-tolerant machines would need hundreds of thousands of quantum bits, far beyond what the experimental systems can endure.

Claim your free seat in an exclusive crypto trading community - limited to 1,000 members.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
MicroStrategy Chair Michael Saylor Breaks 13-Week Bitcoin Buying RitualStrategy (MicroStrategy) may have skipped its weekly Bitcoin (BTC) purchase for the first time since late December, potentially ending a 13-week accumulation streak.Executive Chair Michael Saylor did
Author  Beincrypto
Mar 30, Mon
Strategy (MicroStrategy) may have skipped its weekly Bitcoin (BTC) purchase for the first time since late December, potentially ending a 13-week accumulation streak.Executive Chair Michael Saylor did
placeholder
Solana Price Outlook: What To Expect From SOL In April 2026Solana (SOL) price enters April 2026 under pressure. March is closing at roughly -0.88%, extending a red streak that now stretches six consecutive months since October 2025.A head-and-shoulders breakd
Author  Beincrypto
Mar 31, Tue
Solana (SOL) price enters April 2026 under pressure. March is closing at roughly -0.88%, extending a red streak that now stretches six consecutive months since October 2025.A head-and-shoulders breakd
placeholder
3 Meme Coins To Watch In April 2026April 2026 brings a fresh set of meme coins to watch as technical setups, derivatives shifts, and concentrated wallet structures create potential turning points across multiple tokens.BeInCrypto analy
Author  Beincrypto
Mar 31, Tue
April 2026 brings a fresh set of meme coins to watch as technical setups, derivatives shifts, and concentrated wallet structures create potential turning points across multiple tokens.BeInCrypto analy
placeholder
SpaceX plans a $70-75 billion IPO at a $1.75 trillion valuationSpaceX is pushing for what could be the biggest stock offering ever. But there’s a problem with the timing. Reports last week said the company plans to file IPO paperwork as soon as this week. They want to raise $70-$75 billion, with the company valued at $1.75 trillion. Those are massive numbers that would shatter […]
Author  Cryptopolitan
Mar 31, Tue
SpaceX is pushing for what could be the biggest stock offering ever. But there’s a problem with the timing. Reports last week said the company plans to file IPO paperwork as soon as this week. They want to raise $70-$75 billion, with the company valued at $1.75 trillion. Those are massive numbers that would shatter […]
placeholder
If the US Troops Enter Iran, What Happens to Bitcoin? Lessons From Past WarsMarkets are already reacting to rising geopolitical risk. Several Polymarket insiders who successfully bet on the start date of the Iran war are now betting heavily on US boots on the ground in Iran.N
Author  Beincrypto
1 hour ago
Markets are already reacting to rising geopolitical risk. Several Polymarket insiders who successfully bet on the start date of the Iran war are now betting heavily on US boots on the ground in Iran.N
goTop
quote