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June 12, 2026, 07:07:58 PM |
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Ironically, this is happening in the very year that quantum computing has returned to the spotlight, with major technological breakthroughs, growing institutional interest, and an increasing demand for solutions resistant to quantum attacks. Yet one of the oldest and most relevant projects in this sector is being deliberately harmed by major industry players.
QRL has been around for years. It has working technology, its own operational blockchain, and was built specifically to address one of the very few issues that could pose an existential threat to virtually every blockchain in existence today.
Despite that, the project continues to appear in extremely low positions on CoinMarketCap, far below what its market capitalization would suggest.
What’s even stranger is that the categorization and ranking issues surrounding QRL do not appear to be complicated or difficult to fix. We are talking about one of the largest data platforms in the crypto industry. If there are errors, omissions, or classification problems, why do they remain unresolved for so long?
There was even a response from the CoinMarketCap CEO on QRL’s Twitter account stating that the solution would be a Tier-1 exchange listing 🤣🤣.
Interesting, isn’t it?
Especially considering that CoinMarketCap is owned by Binance.
Another issue that deserves attention is the way CoinMarketCap maintains FALSE rankings and lists related to post-quantum projects.
Anyone who follows this sector knows that many of these lists contain inaccurate information. Simply ask any AI which blockchain projects are genuinely focused on quantum resistance and you will quickly find major discrepancies between the rankings displayed and the actual history, technological focus, and relevance of the projects involved.
They even ranked Zcash as the number one post-quantum project 🤣🤣🤣, something that is completely fake.
Meanwhile, one of the oldest and most recognized projects in this niche continues to be represented in a highly questionable manner.
A platform of this size has a responsibility to provide accurate information to the market.
When inconsistencies persist for months or even years, it is inevitable that the community begins to ask:
Is this simply negligence?
Or is there another reason why a project like QRL continues to be inadequately represented?
I am not claiming anything.
But this situation becomes stranger by the day and increasingly damaging to the reputation of these large market-manipulating platforms.
Eventually, the bill will come due.
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