Thanks, I'll be reading these articles in a while. In the (unlikely) event that I perform a test, are there any widely-recognized softwares that can be used to simulate/attempt to crack Bitcoin cryptography?
That's a whole different direction to privacy, isn't it? I'm not anywhere near the sort of technical expert that is qualified to comment but as I'm aware of, plenty of people have attempted to do this, but as far as I know, this decade-old tech has yet withstood all attempts. In theory, it's possible, but in practicality, not. MIT believes quantum computing could eventually do the trick, but I think they're wrong - at least for another decade, by which time Bitcoin would be even more sophisticated.
There is something of a distributed effort to try this (let's just say brute force cracking) called the Large Bitcoin Collider which purports realistic success, but has been unable to prove it and been debunked many times over. But hey, kudos to them for trying, right? Maybe you could start there:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1555043.0