BTQ Technologies deployed Bitcoin Quantum testnet v0.3.0 on March 19, delivering the first functional implementation of Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 360 and moving quantum-resistant Bitcoin transactions from a theoretical framework into a live, testable environment.
BIP 360 introduces a new output type called Pay-to-Merkle-Root, or P2MR. The proposal was merged into Bitcoin’s official BIP repository earlier this year. Bitcoin Core has made no progress toward its own implementation. BTQ Technologies built the working version independently.
The specific vulnerability P2MR addresses is the key-path spend exposure that exists in Taproot. When a Taproot transaction is broadcast, the public key becomes visible on-chain at the moment of spending. That exposure is the attack surface that a sufficiently powerful quantum computer running Shor’s algorithm could theoretically exploit to derive the private key before the transaction confirms.
P2MR eliminates that exposure while preserving the scripting capabilities that power Lightning, BitVM, and Ark. That compatibility constraint is the critical design requirement. A quantum-resistant upgrade that breaks Layer 2 infrastructure would face insurmountable adoption resistance regardless of its security properties. BIP 360 was designed to avoid that trade-off.
Bitcoin Quantum testnet v0.3.0 is a live environment with end-to-end wallet tooling already operational. Complete wallet RPC support allows users to create, fund, sign, and spend P2MR transactions on testnet today. That moves BIP 360 from a written proposal to usable, testable infrastructure in a single deployment.
The testnet is not new. It has been running long enough to accumulate more than 100,000 mined blocks and attract over 50 active miners. An open-source contributor community is already active around it. Those numbers reflect a development environment with real operational history rather than a freshly launched demo.
The absence of Bitcoin Core progress on BIP 360 implementation is the most politically significant detail in the announcement. Bitcoin’s upgrade process requires broad developer consensus and moves deliberately slowly. A third-party firm deploying a working implementation of a BIP that Core has not acted on creates a specific kind of pressure. It demonstrates feasibility, removes the “unproven” objection, and shifts the conversation from whether quantum-resistant Bitcoin transactions can work to whether Core will implement them.
As covered in earlier publication, Galaxy Digital’s Alex Thorn assessed the quantum threat to Bitcoin as real but not imminent, with the most vulnerable addresses being early Satoshi-era UTXOs that expose public keys directly. BIP 360’s testnet deployment is the practical response to exactly that vulnerability class. The timing of both developments in the same week reflects an accelerating industry conversation about post-quantum readiness rather than a coincidence.
BTQ Technologies intends to operate a Bitcoin Quantum mining pool with a 3% fee on block rewards. The firm is also accumulating approximately 100,000 BTQ tokens in the first twelve months of network operation. That commercial structure positions BTQ to capture value from the quantum transition infrastructure it is building, independent of whether BIP 360 is ultimately adopted into Bitcoin Core.
The testnet serves dual purposes. It advances the technical case for quantum-resistant Bitcoin transactions. It also establishes BTQ as the operational infrastructure provider for whatever post-quantum Bitcoin environment emerges, whether through Core adoption or a parallel network development path.
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