phase velocity is the "speed" at which the point of contact for a wave front moves along the surface it hits. Take the example of us and then some planet orbiting alpha centari. Imagine an electromagnetic pulse sent from far away that first hits alpha centari and then a minute or two later hits Earth. The phase velocity was:
4 lyrs pr minute (or two).
This seems trivially inconsequential, but in QM, the em pulse may be a photon (I think) and so it would collapse if it hits alpha centari. That would mean that it has affected what would happen to Earth just a minute or two later, but, that's just the law of probability, and it really isn't a direct cause from alpha centari to Earth.
What about wormholes? I don't think anyone has yet demonstrated the operation of a wormhole, but that would give you a short-cut through space time. This could possibly cause a paradox. You can think of a wormhole that connects alpha centari to Earth. Then, if you walk through it, at the very moment that you have "disappeared" from Earth, you have appeared on (a planet near) alpha centari. At first glance, this doesn't seem to violate conservation of mass or energy, right? But, what if you consider a frame of reference that moves along a line that goes from Earth to alpha centari at a relativistic speed. Then, the relativity of simultaneity would cause conservation of mass to be violated, because there would either be some period of time in which you had simply vanished from Earth without a trace, or (more profoundly) there would be some period of time in which you were both on Earth and on alpha centari simultaneously. I don't know if you have to adjust the relativity of simultaneity for the tremendous curvature of a wormhole or something else like that, but a wormhole is just a (rather) fancy idea to begin with, anyway, so this is (very much) like saying that time travel causes a paradox. Yes, it may cause a paradox, but that's OK (unless someone actually does build a wormhole or time machine).