The post Cambridge Spent 11 Years Stress-Testing Bitcoin appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin A new academic study out of Cambridge has put eleven yearsThe post Cambridge Spent 11 Years Stress-Testing Bitcoin appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Bitcoin A new academic study out of Cambridge has put eleven years

Cambridge Spent 11 Years Stress-Testing Bitcoin

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A new academic study out of Cambridge has put eleven years of Bitcoin network data under the microscope. The results are counterintuitive. The physical internet — the cables, the routing systems, the undersea infrastructure — barely registers as a threat to Bitcoin’s survival.

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin can withstand failure of up to 92% of the world’s submarine cables before the network breaks
  • 87% of real cable faults in the past decade caused less than 5% node disruption
  • The real vulnerability isn’t cables — it’s five cloud providers hosting most of the network
  • Up to 7 million BTC may be exposed to future quantum attacks, but a practical threat is likely a decade away

The study, conducted by Wenbin Wu and Alexander Neumueller at the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance, is the first longitudinal analysis of how Bitcoin holds up when the physical pipes of the internet break. The answer, for the most part, is: fine.

The Numbers

Eight million node observations. 658 submarine cables. 385 verified fault events over eleven years. What the researchers found was a network that absorbs physical disruption with almost no visible damage.

In 87% of recorded cable failures, fewer than 5% of Bitcoin nodes went offline. Average node impact during a fault: minus 1.5%. Median: minus 0.4%. Most cable cuts simply don’t move the needle.

The threshold for genuinely damaging random failure sits between 72% and 92% of all inter-country cables failing simultaneously. That’s not a realistic scenario.

March 2024 tested this in real time. Seabed disturbances off Côte d’Ivoire severed seven or eight cables at once. Regional internet capacity dropped 43%. Bitcoin nodes affected globally: five to seven. That’s 0.03% of the network.

Why the Network Doesn’t Break

The researchers modeled Bitcoin as a three-layer system: a physical layer of submarine cables, a routing layer run by companies like Comcast and AWS, and the Bitcoin peer-to-peer overlay on top.

These layers are loosely coupled. A physical failure doesn’t automatically cascade upward. When one route breaks, traffic reroutes. The network doesn’t notice.

By 2026, around 64% of reachable Bitcoin nodes operate through Tor. Originally framed as a privacy measure, the study reframes it as a structural asset. Tor nodes route through obfuscated pathways that don’t map to physical cable geography. When a regional cable fails, Tor-based nodes are less exposed. The researchers found Tor adoption raises the resilience threshold by a measurable margin.

The Actual Threat

The study identifies two real vulnerabilities. First, targeted attacks on specific chokepoints drop the failure threshold from 92% down to 20%. Coordinated sabotage of high-traffic cables is a different problem than random breakage.

Second — and more relevant in 2026 — the network’s routing layer is heavily concentrated in five providers: Hetzner, OVHcloud, Comcast, AWS, and Google Cloud. Targeting just those five through regulatory pressure or coordinated action could trigger a 10% network disconnection. That’s roughly equivalent to cutting nearly every undersea cable on earth, achieved by pressuring five companies instead.

The threat isn’t the ocean floor. It’s the server room. As Bitcoin enters conversations about strategic reserves at the government level, domestic regulatory pressure on cloud providers is a more plausible attack vector than physical cable sabotage.

The Quantum Threat

Separate from today’s infrastructure threats, there’s a longer-term problem the Bitcoin community is beginning to formally address: quantum computing.

The risk is specific. Quantum computers threaten ECDSA — the digital signature system that proves Bitcoin ownership. SHA-256, which secures the mining process, is far more resistant. The danger is that a sufficiently powerful quantum machine could reverse-engineer a private key from a public key exposed on the blockchain.

Between 4 and 7 million BTC — up to 33% of supply — are currently considered vulnerable. This includes early-era coins where public keys were posted directly to the ledger, including Satoshi’s estimated one million BTC. Any address that has sent a transaction and still holds funds is also exposed, because broadcasting a transaction reveals the public key.

Modern address formats are protected until spent. But that’s not a permanent solution.

Not everyone is buying the quantum panic narrative. Bitcoin developer Matt Carallo pointed out that if quantum were genuinely spooking markets, Ethereum – which has a more advanced quantum upgrade roadmap – would likely be holding up better by comparison.

Carallo called it a long-term risk, and attributed the current turbulence to capital rotating into AI rather than any cryptographic threat. Even Vitalik Buterin, who sits on the more cautious end of the spectrum, puts the odds of a significant quantum breakthrough before 2030 at around 20%. That’s not nothing. But it’s also not a certainty — and markets, for now, appear to agree.

What’s Being Built

In February 2026, BIP-360 was merged into the Bitcoin codebase — the first formal quantum defense measure. It removes certain Taproot features that could expose public keys on-chain. Several companies have launched quantum-resistant testnets trialing lattice-based signature schemes like Dilithium and Falcon. The tradeoff is size: current signatures run around 70 bytes, lattice-based alternatives exceed 1,000. Fitting that into Bitcoin’s block structure without destroying fee economics is the active engineering problem.

Where Experts Stand

Current quantum hardware sits around 100 usable qubits. A practical attack on Bitcoin requires an estimated 2,330 logical qubits — placing a credible threat at least ten years out by most analyses.

The concern taken most seriously today isn’t sudden theft. It’s harvest-now-decrypt-later. Nation-state actors are presumed to already be recording blockchain data. They don’t need to break keys today. If quantum hardware matures on schedule, transactions from years ago become retroactively exposed.

The engineering work has started. The threat is real. The window for inaction is narrowing — but slowly.


The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Author

Alex is an experienced financial journalist and cryptocurrency enthusiast. With over 8 years of experience covering the crypto, blockchain, and fintech industries, he is well-versed in the complex and ever-evolving world of digital assets. His insightful and thought-provoking articles provide readers with a clear picture of the latest developments and trends in the market. His approach allows him to break down complex ideas into accessible and in-depth content. Follow his publications to stay up to date with the most important trends and topics.

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Source: https://coindoo.com/cambridge-spent-11-years-stress-testing-bitcoin-heres-what-they-found-in-their-research/

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