Blockstream Samson Mow on Scalability: Bitcoins are Tanks while Altcoins are Bicycles

Towards the end of 2017, the cryptocurrency market was in a state of delirium. Bitcoin set record price after record price and reached a peak of around $20,000 USD per token. During this market frenzy, a huge issue long-suspected by educated developers was finally revealed—the bitcoin network had become overloaded and was running against the limits of its capacity, unable to scale beyond seven transactions per second.

Samson Mow is an entrepreneur and marketing strategist who is currently serving as the Chief Strategy Officer at Blockstream. Samson Mow is known as a Bitcoin expert and he is often invited to speak on panels and give presentations at blockchain events and conferences. He rose to some prominence in the community from his famous bitcoin scaling debate with Roger Ver—AKA Bitcoin Jesus, at Deconomy 2018.

We caught up with Mow at The Capital by CoinMarketCap in Singapore. He discussed the Liquid and Lightning Networks and his thoughts on the future of Bitcoin scalability.

Entering Blockstream

Mow originally worked as a video game developer and founded Pixelmatic in 2011. He was working on creating engaging social games when he first heard about Bitcoin in 2013. Mow said, “I was reading the news and came across an article about Bitcoin. I found it very interesting because it was like an in-game currency that no one controls. Soon after I worked for BTC China (BTCC), a cryptocurrency exchange and mining pool as the COO. Following this, I became very interested in the infrastructure layer of the Bitcoin protocol and joined Blockstream.”

Blockstream does a lot of very interesting work at the protocol level of Bitcoin itself, building second-layer solutions to make scaling more efficient. Mow said, “I felt that I could bring a lot to Blockstream as I’m good with product marketing and business, which is traditionally what Blockstream has struggled with, as it was largely driven by engineering—not really business-minded people.”

Bitcoin Tanks and Altcoin Bicycles

According to Mow, many blockchain developers and industry experts are completely missing the point when it comes to Bitcoin and their criticism of its slow transaction speed. Mow explained “people like to talk about Bitcoin’s ability to only transact seven times per second. This criticism usually comes from altcoin developers and it’s usually because they have their own blockchain or coin which is touted to be able to transact 20X, 30X or even 50X per second. But if you really understand how blockchains work, the technology is actually not very conducive to fast transactions because the network needs to keep in sync. The reason there is a limit on BTC transactions per second is because we have ten-minute block times. So transactions work out to seven a second based on the total number per block divided by the ten minutes.”

While other alternative blockchains are able to increase the number of transactions per second to 50, according to Mow, it really is not a gamechanger as a good payment network really needs hundreds of thousands of transactions per second. “The way to think about it correctly is: Bitcoin was designed to be a tank. And these other altcoin projects are selling you a bicycle, but it’s two different roles basically. The bicycle will go faster than a tank, of course, but if you get shot with a bazooka, basically you’re going to die whereas the tank’s architecture will protect you because it’s heavily armored. So it’s basically a conflation between two things–a payment system and a settlement system, and Bitcoin is a settlement system.”

Liquid vs Lightning

Two of the key initiatives that have come from Blockstream are the Liquid and the Lightning networks. Liquid is a sidechain-based settlement network for traders and exchanges purportedly enabling fast and confidential BTC transactions and the issuance of digital assets. Lightning Network is a micropayments protocol that enables instant, low-cost BTC transactions.

Mow explained the difference between the two, he said, “Liquid is a Bitcoin side-chain, and what that means is—it’s a blockchain that does not have its own native currency, it still has Bitcoin but in another format called Liquid Bitcoin (L-BTC).” By comparison, “Lightning does not have a blockchain per se. It is purely peer-to-peer; you connect to people that you need to connect to and route through the network. So it’s quite different—and the benefit of Lightning is that the transactions are nearly instantaneous, and almost free which you don’t have with Liquid because it is a blockchain. Liquid does have faster one-minute blocks but we still need to keep the network in sync, so there is a limit there. Whereas in Lightning, there is no limit to how big the network can scale.”

Another key difference is that users can have hot and cold wallets in Liquid, but in the Lightning Network wallets are always hot. Mow explained, “they’re always online, so your keys are technically exposed. But as people are receiving money through Lightning, they’re going to close out channels and cash out.”

Paying off your Lightning Tab

As we pushed further into the protocols of the Lightning Network, Mow offered a simple yet powerful analogy. He said, “I guess the easiest way to conceptualize it for the average person is by comparing it to a bar tab. So you go to a bar and you want to have some drinks that night but instead of paying for your drinks one by one, you give them your credit card and open a tab and settle it at the end of the night.” He continued, “Lightning is similarly just aggregating transactions; you open a channel with someone and you can route through that channel. You don’t need to broadcast all of your transactions through the blockchain because that would clutter it up.”

In the past, the crypto industry has witnessed the Bitcoin chain get clogged due to too many transactions, and this has consequently inflated the price of transactions. Mow reiterated, “a lot of those types of transactions are not really necessary. For instance, if you were to buy a cup of coffee—you don’t need to put that in the Bitcoin blockchain.” In summary, he said, “the way lightning works is that you open a channel and when you open and close that channel, those are on-chain transactions, but everything else in between is counted as off-chain and does not require the blockchain to sync. So you have cost savings and faster transactions.”

On whether the Lightning Network could be overlaid onto other blockchain protocols such as Ethereum, Mow confirmed, “In theory, I would say yes. In fact, Ethereum has a similar concept to the Lightning Network called Plasma. Although I am unsure why you would need it as Ethereum is not supposed to be money.” He clarified, “it makes sense for any blockchain or cryptocurrency that is purporting to be money so it makes sense for Bitcoin. Because if the main layer is for settlement, then you need a layer for spending and lightning allows you to do so quickly.”

Mow added, “you can actually have a Lightning Network running on top of Liquid although we actually haven’t implemented it before. But you can actually issue different assets in the Liquid Network. For example, we have Liquid Tether in our network, we have a Japanese Yen stablecoin and several others.” He concluded, “technically, if each of those has enough liquidity, like a lot of people have Liquid USDT, then you could create a Lightning Network on top of USDT.”

Micropayments and the Traditional Financial System

Micropayments are payments of less than a dollar (and in some cases, a fraction of a cent) that are usually made online. It is not common to be able to transact these amounts through traditional banking services. The latest technological advancements in FinTech, such as blockchain have brought about more exposure and inclusion into the digital world.

Mow offered his explanation for why banks were incapable of servicing the micropayment market efficiently. He said, “I think it largely has to do with cost. You can do small transactions through banks but what it comes down to is the cost as they take a fee of three to five percent because it’s merchant processing, so it doesn’t really make sense especially for a machine to machine payments—you don’t want a 5% tax on top.” He continued, “technically, with the credit cards, you could do micropayments if you say it’s like under $1. But again, it doesn’t really make a lot of sense because the whole traditional financial system is very clunky. It’s very old. And, you know, even interbank transfers don’t work well. It’s just not really feasible to do these kinds of micropayments on that old network.”

  

IRS Criminal Investigations Puts $625,000 Bounty on Monero Privacy Crack and BTC Lightning Network Tracker

The United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is serious about tracking illegal cryptocurrency transactions and is now offering a $625,000 bounty to anyone who can track Monero’s privacy coins—as well as trace transactions on Bitcoin’s (BTC) Lightning Network.

The IRS is calling on the tech community to offer a working prototype submission that can crack Monero’s (XMR) privacy protocol and track transactions on the Bitcoin’s Lightning Network scaling solution—the agency is also offering 625,000 reasons to aid the United States tax department.

In an official proposal, the IRS has announced it will accept submissions of working prototypes until the deadline of September 16—if a submission can successfully track XMR or BTC Lightning transactions, the applicant will receive an initial payment grant of $500,000.

The $500,000 grant is to facilitate the applicant’s development of their XMR and LN tracker prototype for an 8 month period—should the working concept be approved, a further $125,000 will be awarded to the applicant.

Per the proposal:

“IRS-CI is seeking a solution with one or more contractors to provide innovative solutions for tracing and attribution of privacy coins, such as expert tools, data, source code, algorithms, and software development services.”

The initiative comes from the IRS’ Criminal Investigations (CI) department a department, which has been a global leader in cybercriminal investigations involving cryptocurrency and has played a lead or key role in the takedown of numerous major Dark Net Marketplaces and other transnational criminal organizations facilitating identify theft, narcotics trafficking, money laundering, terrorist financing, sex trafficking, and child prostitution.

The IRS announcement states the initiative’s main aim is to help IRS-CI agents to track transactions, identify wallets and holders to flag suspicious and illicit activity. The prototype when completed will be the sole property of the IRS CI agents so that the United States Treasury Department will not need to rely on any external vendors.

Monero, Lightning and Illicit Transaction

Monero (XMR) has fast become the preferred digital asset for illegal activity due to its privacy functions, masking the identity of the user. The IRS used the example of the ransomware group Sodinokibi which now only demands ransoms in XMR in comparison to Bitcoin or Eth which cant be traced.

The IRS stated:

“The use of privacy coins is becoming more popular for general use, and is also seeing an increase in use by illicit actors. For example, in April 2020 a RaaS (Ransomware as a Service) group called Sodinokibi (a former affiliate with the GrandCrab RaaS group) stated that future ransom request payments will be in Monero (XMR) rather than Bitcoin (BTC) due to transaction privacy concerns.”

In regards to the Bitcoin Layer 2 protocol, the IRS explains that Lightning Labs has developed a monitoring app, Lndmon, for the Bitcoin LN and has released the code on GitHub with no current resources developed for LNs on other distributed ledgers.

The IRS-CI therefore “has the need to be able to investigate illicit activity on these networks. The number of nodes on the LN has grown to nearly 10,000 since the initial release in March 2018, close to the number of full nodes on the Bitcoin mainchain.”

Privacy coins are a key strategy to help criminals obfuscate their transactions, with the IRS stating:

“Currently, there are limited investigative resources for tracing transactions involving privacy cryptocurrency coins such as Monero or other off-chain transactions that provide privacy to illicit actors.”

As reported by Blockchain.News on Sept. 2, the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claims to now be able to track transactions of the most privacy-oriented cryptocurrency coin, Monero (XMR), leveraging a new tool by crypto intelligence company CipherTrace—however, the tool is still untested.

Nevertheless, Ciphertrace has made claims that the tool provides the US DHS with visualization, exploration, and search tools for tracking Monero transaction flows; integrated with CipherTrace’s Inspector financial investigations products to help ensure investment funds, OTC trading desks and cryptocurrency exchanges do not accept Monero currencies from illicit proceeds and can investigate Monero obtained from potentially illicit sources and take appropriate actions to stay in compliance.

Elon Musk: Lightning Network Needed to Fix Scalability Problem in Bitcoin Network

Elon Musk, the founder and CEO of Tesla Inc., sparked on Twitter Saturday, suggesting that the layer-2 payments Lightning Network are required for now to scale Bitcoin (BTC) transaction. The billionaire said that the Bitcoin network could meet increasing demand if its users adopted the Lightning Network, a payment that makes Bitcoins transactions cheaper and faster.

“Bitcoin hashing (aka mining) energy usage is starting to exceed that of medium-sized countries. Almost impossible for small hashers to succeed without those massive economies of scale. For now, Lightning is needed,” Musk said on Twitter.

Lightning is a type of software that processes BTC transactions out of the Bitcoin blockchain to lighten the loading on the network. In other words, Lightning enables cheaper and faster transactions by enabling user-generated channels for receiving and sending payments.

Musk, therefore, suggests that lightning would be necessary to offer the required bandwidth. 

“Layer count depends on projected bandwidth & compute, both rising rapidly, which means single layer network [e.g. Bitcoin alone] can carry all human transactions in future imo,” Musk said.

Without this Lightning, currently, it costs an average fee of $13 and takes 14 minutes to move funds across the Bitcoin network.

The Lightning could help to move funds at the cost of about one satoshi (0.00037636 USD), and transactions are almost instant.

However, critics claim that the Lightning Network sacrifices decentralization as some computational work out of the Bitcoin blockchain. 

Musk termed achieving truly decentralized finance – to empower people – as a noble and vital goal, responding to BTC Session, a Twitter crypto advocate, who asked whether Tesla CEO had put into consideration whether lightning sacrificed on decentralization.

Lightning Labs Inc., which based in Silicon Valley, California, began developing the Lightning Network in 2016 and launched a protocol in beta in 2018. Square and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is among investors in Lighting Labs.

Green Bitcoin Alternative 

A few days ago, Musk commented on BTC due to the crypto’s environmental impact and reliance on Chinese miners. The Tesla CEO has recently talked about Bitcoin’s energy consumption on Twitter, especially a shock announcement that Tesla stopped accepting Bitcoin payments for its motor vehicle sales. 

Musk is looking at cryptocurrencies’ that uses less than 1% of Bitcoin’s energy usage. Dogecoin (DOGE) developers revealed that the Tesla CEO had offered funds to improve the network, which consumes a fraction of Bitcoin’s energy consumption.

Meanwhile, Musk suggested ten major cryptocurrency mining firms that should post audits of the amount of renewable energy used in their operations as a way to address the energy consumption matter.

BlueWallet is Sunsetting Its Lightning Node Connection to Lndhub

According to an official announcement, BlueWallet will be disconnecting its lightning node connection to Lndhub in the near future. BlueWallet is going to stop its custodial lightning operations. This means that customers of BlueWallet who are also members of the Bitcoin (BTC) Lightning Network will need to connect to nodes in order to continue making use of BlueWallet’s lighting services.

“The most essential thing is that people don’t panic, and suddenly noobs take out their on-chain money or incorrect lightning balances,” said one person. “This is the most crucial thing.”

Bitcoin serves as the foundation for the Lightning Network, which is a layer-2 payment system. Small sums of bitcoin, also known as satoshis or sats, may be transferred between users with the use of the Lightning Network. This is often done via a lightning wallet.

Blue Wallet is a well-known Lightning Network wallet that has a liquidity pool of more than 42 BTC (one million dollars). According to the statistics provided by Amboss, the network’s biggest channel has a capacity of 4 BTC, which is equivalent to $95,000. BlueWallet is a well-known lightning wallet that comes highly recommended by some of the most prominent Bitcoin users.

Calle said, “It is essential to understand that lndhub is a protocol that facilitates the linking of wallets to accounts. BlueWallet is the wallet that supports LndHub in this instance; however, other wallets, like as Alby and Zeus, also support LndHub.

It is just the account that is being closed, not LndHub or Bluewallet in and of itself. This particular account is hosted by the BlueWallet team, and they have expressed that they no longer want to be responsible for it.

Although users will still be able to withdraw their sats, the LndHub node will no longer let users to create new lightning wallets or refill current ones. BlueWallet has issued a public statement advising customers who have satellite wallets linked to BlueWallet’s lightning node to transfer such wallets as soon as possible.

Because customers of BlueWallet will no longer have access to the service after April 30th, it is imperative that they transfer their sats to another service or wallet of their choosing before the service is discontinued. However, Bitcoin wallets that are used regularly will not be impacted by this change.

According to the website, BlueWallet will “only support self-custody solutions,” which is a crucial fact to keep in mind despite the fact that some people may regard the move as an impediment to the widespread adoption of the Lightning Network. The modification intends to encourage decentralized solutions and self-custody in its recipients.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong hints at Lightning integration

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has hinted that the cryptocurrency exchange may integrate Lightning, a layer 2 scaling solution for Bitcoin. In a tweet, Armstrong responded to criticism for not integrating the Lightning network by saying, “Lightning is great and something we’ll integrate.” However, he did not provide any further details on what the integration would involve or when it could be expected.

The Lightning network enables faster and cheaper BTC transactions than the Bitcoin base network, but Coinbase, along with other exchanges such as Binance and FTX, has been criticized for not integrating the technology. If Armstrong follows through on his statement, Coinbase would join Bitfinex, Kraken, and OKX as the largest trading platforms to integrate Lightning.

David Coen, a Lightning enthusiast, had previously suggested that many trading platforms may be reluctant to integrate Lightning because it goes against their business plan of integrating as many altcoins as possible. However, Coinbase has lately been more active in the Ethereum ecosystem, launching “Base” in February 2021, an Ethereum layer 2 application-focused network powered by fellow layer 2 Optimism.

In addition to the potential Lightning integration, Armstrong recently offered a $100 prize for the “best” examples of how people are using crypto in Africa. However, the winner reported that he has not received the payment, prompting a Bitcoiner to suggest that Armstrong “needs a lesson on Lightning.”

It is interesting to note that Armstrong wrote an article in January 2016 expressing support for Bitcoin scaling solutions, saying, “We also did it to show our support for scaling Bitcoin, and encourage things to move forward, since we’d like to see a solution sooner rather than later.” Lightning was launched about two years later in March 2018, with last month marking the fifth anniversary of the network.

If Coinbase were to integrate Lightning, it would be a significant step towards making Bitcoin more accessible and practical for everyday transactions. With the rising popularity of altcoins and increasing demand for fast, low-cost transactions, integrating scaling solutions like Lightning is becoming increasingly important for cryptocurrency exchanges. However, it remains to be seen when and how Coinbase will integrate Lightning, and whether other major exchanges will follow suit.

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