The BMIC presale has launched, attracting attention with its quantum-secure wallet and a strategic token pricing structure. The presale price starts at $0.049999 per token, with a planned increase to $0.058182 over its course. Nearly $500,000 has already been raised, reflecting strong investor interest. BMIC’s presale accepts multiple cryptocurrencies including ETH, USDT, and USDC, all facilitated on the Ethereum platform. Notably, the presale is projected to run through 50 phases, each offering potentially growing opportunities for participants. This innovative approach ties into the broader push for secure digital transactions as quantum computing advances.
Standard consumer wallets such as MetaMask and Ledger expose the user’s public key on the blockchain when sending a transaction. This exposure occurs during normal transaction activity and is present across many widely used wallets. “Most crypto wallets today share a flaw that most users don’t even know exists.” Because the public key becomes visible on-chain, it can be accessed by any observer of blockchain data.
Quantum computers can apply Shor’s algorithm to reverse-engineer private keys from exposed public keys, creating a security risk for affected wallets. Experts at the World Economic Forum have flagged the harvest-now, decrypt-later threat in this context. The material lists these elements—the on-chain public-key exposure and Shor’s algorithm capability—without adding speculative claims.
BMIC uses signature-hiding smart accounts together with ERC-4337 account abstraction and hybrid post-quantum cryptography signatures to ensure the public key never appears on the blockchain. The project presents these signature-hiding smart accounts and the hybrid signing layer as the mechanism for avoiding on-chain public-key exposure. The description identifies ERC-4337 account abstraction as part of the account model and hybrid PQC signatures as the signing method that prevents the public key from touching the chain. No detailed implementation steps are provided in the material.
The hybrid PQC signatures are described as capable of updating automatically as NIST standards evolve, with AI monitoring activity and optimizing performance. The material states that the wallet architecture, staking system, and payment layer operate without exposing public keys. These design elements are presented as components of BMIC’s broader quantum-secure finance stack. The provided content does not include additional technical specifics beyond these stated features.
BMIC plans a full quantum-secure finance stack that includes a wallet, staking, payments, and an enterprise quantum-secure-as-a-service (QSaaS) offering. The project presents these components as an integrated set of services within its stated stack. The material states that the wallet architecture, staking system, and payment layer operate without exposing public keys. These elements are described as components of BMIC’s broader technical offering.
The BMIC token ($BMIC) is described as tied to wallet features, enterprise API access, and future compute credits for the Quantum Meta-Cloud. The content links the token to access across the wallet and enterprise services. The material also states that hybrid post-quantum cryptography signatures can update automatically as NIST standards evolve and that AI monitors activity and optimizes performance. Those updating signatures and AI monitoring are presented as security and performance elements of the stack.
These descriptions are presented together as parts of BMIC’s stated quantum-secure finance stack. The material frames the token’s utility in relation to those platform components. All items above are described within the provided material.
NIST finalized post-quantum cryptography standards in 2024. The provided material cites these standards as part of the quantum-cryptography landscape. The material presents the NIST standards as an element in the described technical baseline. Experts at the World Economic Forum have flagged the harvest-now, decrypt-later threat. The material references the WEF warnings alongside the NIST standards.
These items are presented in the provided material as contextual elements for post-quantum security. The content does not add technical detail beyond citing the standards and expert warnings. No additional authorities or assessments are introduced in the material.
The BMIC presale and its quantum‑secure wallet are described in the provided material as addressing on‑chain public-key exposure present in standard wallets and the related risks posed by advances in quantum cryptography. The project is presented as combining signature-hiding smart accounts, hybrid post‑quantum signatures, and a broader quantum-secure finance stack including wallet, staking, payments, and enterprise QSaaS.


