The ongoing debate about whether or not Bitcoin can scale sufficiently on its path to mass adoption has led many people to question if it will ever reach that point at all.
The Bitcoin protocol’s main focus is providing security in transactions. It prevents double-spending by making it incredibly difficult to reverse a transaction because of the energy spent verifying these transactions. It only releases a set number of bitcoins into the world — and it does so very slowly. It is meant to be simple in purpose but highly secure in practice. When all of these feats are achieved, it eventually obtains the characteristics of a store of value, and that is all Bitcoin needs to be.
Bitcoin is a low-level protocol that can be used in conjunction with other protocols. The scaling opportunities in Bitcoin lie in the additional protocol layers that will be built on top of it, such as Lightning Network. As many have come to realize, it is these other protocols that can help to solve many of bitcoin’s scaling issues without having to alter Bitcoin’s current software. The idea, as Bitcoin began to grow, is that layers will be built on top of it.
Layer Two Technologies
Periods of very high network activity on Bitcoin do not allow for practical uses such as buying coffee or transacting in small amounts due to the high transaction fees that come with high network usage. Solutions to this problem have come in the form of second-layer technologies, like Lightning. Lightning is a layer built on top of Bitcoin that allows for near-instant micropayments by settling transactions off-chain.
As a second layer scaling solution to Bitcoin, Lightning is computer code which gives you a mathematical guarantee to claim the funds being transacted with. The Lightning Network is perhaps the most promising (but not the only) second-layer technology being developed that will make this possible. Certainly, there will be many more use cases we may not have even imagined yet.
I wanted to share some thoughts on a seemingly overlooked innovation that has come to Bitcoin within the last year, called Bitpacs. Bitpac stands for a Bitcoin Based Publicly Auditable Cooperative. Bitpacs are essentially normal bitcoin multisig wallets with the additional introduction of public auditability. Traditionally in a multisig setup, participants of the multisig are
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged Kraken with failing to register their crypto asset staking-as-a-service program.The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged Payward Ventures, Inc. and Payward Trading Ltd., commonly known as Kraken, for failing to register the offer and sale of their crypto asset staking-as-a-service program. The program allowed investors to…
By Bitcoin Schmitcoin Copyedit by Ashley Lachance Since mid-February, the bitcoin market has continued to drift upward toward a band of strong, macro resistance (shown below as a red band). This slow, drift upward marks our fourth test of the resistance zone and, unlike the three prior tests, our rejection of the level has shown…
Norway is putting on a major Bitcoin conference with high-signal speakers, topped off with an otherworldly rave running on Lightning.This is an opinion editorial by Erik Dale, an organizer of the upcoming Northern Lightning Conference and host of a Scandinavian Bitcoin podcast. Source Scandinavia may not be the first region that comes to mind when…
The wait is over, folks. Bakkt’s bitcoin futures trading is officially live. Trading for the Intercontinental Exchange’s (ICE) Bakkt bitcoin futures product launched on September 22, 2019, at 8:00 p.m. EST. As of this writing, 57 monthly futures contracts (1 contract = 1 bitcoin) have been sold on the platform, 29 of which changed hands…
Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin Reserves And The Incentives Of Civil Asset Forfeiture Yesterday, President Trump announced the long awaited Strategic “Bitcoin” Reserve on Truth Social, and many in the space are pissed. First, the Reserve appears to be far from Bitcoin only. “They’re doing DEI for Charles Hoskinson,” former CoinDesk Chief Insights Columnist David Z. Morris
JP Sears, a comedian, freedom advocate and cofounder of Lightning Network social platform Zion, discusses the future of Bitcoin.Watch This Episode On YouTubeListen To This Episode:BitcoinTVAppleSpotifyGoogleLibsynOvercastRumbleIn this episode of the Bitcoin Magazine podcast, host Christian Keroles was joined by comedian, freedom advocate and cofounder of Zion, J.P. Sears. “I think freedom is what makes life…
For nearly a decade, participants in the blockchain and cryptocurrency space have operated in a regulatory compliance gray zone. Recent developments — at both the federal and international levels — signal that the time for plausible deniability or unregulated freedom is coming to an end and more traditional regulations are moving to the forefront. Currently,…
Traditionally considered an odd couple, Bitcoin has made intriguing forays into the crypto ecosystem over the past year. Cake Wallet's decision to integrate Lightning is an unexpected yet exciting development that continues this trend of Bitcoin integration. In doing so, Cake aims to make Bitcoin more practical for everyday use for its users.In a post