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Antoine Riard, who left the Lightning Network in October, argues the Lightning Network is also at risk of becoming increasingly centralized and susceptible to single points of failure and censorship risks.
Developers working on the Bitcoin layer 2 Lightning Network have become less security-oriented and more focused on producing cash flow for their investors, argues a former Lightning Network developer.
Bitcoin core developer and security researcher Antoine Riard, made headlines last month after leaving the Lightning ecosystem over concerns about a new attack vector called “replacement cycling,” which exploiters could potentially use to steal funds by targeting payment channels.
How does a lightning replacement cycling attack work?
— mononaut (@mononautical) October 21, 2023
There's a lot of discussion about this newly discovered vulnerability on the mailing lists, but the actual mechanism is a bit hard to follow.
So here's an illustrated primer...
1/n pic.twitter.com/mvvS8bEc5f
At the time, Riard said the new class of attacks puts Lighting in a "perilous position" though some observers argued that
Riard told Cointelegraph that he’s now working at the Bitcoin base layer to address the issue and urged Lightning developers to follow suit:
“[They need to] wake up, stop the sleepwalking and go to the whiteboard to design a robust and sustainable fix in hand with other developers at the base-layer, preserving the long-term decentralization and openness of Lightning.”
Riard also claimed that many Lightning-focused firms are compromising Lightning’s mission and security incentives for the sake of pleasing venture capitalists:
“The sad fact being most of them are working for VC-funded entities, or commercial entities with the same low-time preference, at the long-term detriment of end-users.”
Riard said it’s a classic example of the “tragedy of the commons” — where individuals and entities with access to a public resource act in their own interest and deplete it.
Decentralization appears to be a trade-off that these VC-funded Lightning firms are willing to make, which is a major concern to Riard.
“Centralized systems are great in the scale of efficiency, however they come with the downside of systemic single-point-of-failure and lower cost of user censorship, fundamental risks that one might wish to hedge against as a Bitcoiner.”
“I'm not sure this is an interesting Lightning future,” Riard said. In fact, it is something which he wants no part of, after departing from the Lightning ecosystem on Oct. 20:
“I do not wish to be associated with being in charge or accountable of the Lightning Network security, and the ~5,300 BTC exposed here. There is little [I and others] can do to halt the haemorrhage, without compromising the core values of censorship-resistance and permissionless of the Lightning Network.”
Lightning is the best solution currently available, but it's not good enough.
— torkel (@torkelrogstad) November 20, 2023
Lightning has several fundamental flaws, where each of them make the system as a whole a dead end for bitcoin, long term. An attempt at explaining these, and what we should do instead.
Liquidity…
Related: Bitcoin Lightning Network growth jumps 1,200% in 2 years
The Lightning Network is the second-layer solution built over the Bitcoin blockchain. It is designed to improve the scalability and efficiency of Bitcoin
Through the Lightning Network, users can open payment channels, conduct multiple transactions off-chain, and settle the final result on the Bitcoin blockchain. The replacement cycling attack is a new type of attack that allows the attacker to steal funds from a channel participant by exploiting inconsistencies between individual mempools.
Cointelegraph reached out to Lightning Labs and other firms in the Lighting ecosystem but did not receive a response.
Don't get me wrong here: Lightning is great! Always still amazed when using it.
— яobin linus (@robin_linus) November 19, 2023
The point is that it can't scale enough. And Ark is not a competitor but more of an add-on. Gives you all the advantages of Cashu but without requiring trust.
All we need is covenants. Ideally, CAT https://t.co/nhrmvqPYf0
However, despite the security concerns and potential move toward centralization, Riard explained that Lightning hasn’t seen as many attacks as many Ethereum layer 2s because Lightning users typically only store a small amount of funds in their wallets at any given time.
A total of $194.1 million in BTC is locked in the Lightning Network, according to DeFiLlama.
Magazine: Should you ‘orange pill’ children? The case for Bitcoin kids books
Taproot Assets is “how we bitcoinize the dollar and the world’s financial assets,” says Ryan Gentry, director of business development at Lightning Labs.
Bitcoin layer-2 infrastructure firm Lightning Labs has released the mainnet alpha of Taproot Assets, a protocol aimed at enabling stablecoins and real-world assets to be issued on the Bitcoin and Lightning Network.
The current version, Taproot Assets v0.3, will provide a “feature-complete developer experience” to issue, manage and explore stablecoins and other assets on the Bitcoin blockchain, according to Ryan Gentry, head of business development at Lightning Labs.
“We believe this new era for Bitcoin will see a myriad of global currencies issued as Taproot Assets, and the world's foreign exchange transactions settled instantly over the Lightning Network.”
“With this release, developers can issue financial assets on-chain in a scalable manner,” Lightning Labs stated on Oct. 18 in a separate post. “Today marks a new era of multi-asset bitcoin.”
Announcing the first mainnet release of Taproot Assets , a protocol for assets on #bitcoin and Lightning.
— Lightning Labs⚡️ (@lightning) October 18, 2023
With this release, developers can issue financial assets on-chain in a scalable manner.
Today marks a new era of multi-asset bitcoin. https://t.co/2cNvZSvv8v
This version of Taproot Assets will work by routing through existing Bitcoin liquidity on the Lightning Network.
Gentry says the integration will extend Bitcoin’s network effects and move it one step closer toward “bitcoinizing the dollar.” He added:
“This is how we make bitcoin the global routing network for the internet of money. This is how we bitcoinize the dollar and the world's financial assets.”
Gentry described developer demand for stablecoin applications on Bitcoin as “overwhelming” — particularly given that some stablecoin issuers hold more United States Treasuries than the likes of Germany, South Korea.
The future we deserve#bitcoin https://t.co/XW433TVEIL
— Paolo Ardoino (@paoloardoino) October 18, 2023
“[It] signifies the importance of these assets globally, and gives a sense of scale for the global user demand,” Gentry added.
Related: BitVM wasn’t created to make Bitcoin a pseudo-Ethereum, says developer
Nearly 2,000 Taproot Assets were minted on testnets over the last several months in the lead up to the mainnet alpha launch, according to Gentry.
Alpha launches typically mean the development isn’t in its final state. Lightning Labs said the alpha tag indicates that they expect the community to test it for potential bugs.
Bitcoin Drivechains (through Bitcoin Improvement Proposal-300), Botanix Labs’ Spiderchain and the BitVM are among the other developments in the Bitcoin ecosystem looking to expand Bitcoin’s capabilities.
Magazine: Recursive inscriptions — Bitcoin ‘supercomputer’ and BTC DeFi coming soon
Lightning Labs have unveiled a new solution to the clunky process for minting new assets on the Bitcoin network.
Bitcoin (BTC) users have been given a possibly more efficient way to mint new assets on the blockchain aft an updated edition of the recently-rebranded Taproot Assets Protocol was released by Lightning Labs.
In a May 16 blog post, Lightning Network infrastructure firm Lighting Labs criticized the current methods by which assets are inscribed on the Bitcoin blockchain calling them “particularly efficient” and pointed to cumbersome protocols that write asset metadata “directly into block space.”
Today we're excited to announce the newest version of Taproot Assets , a scalable protocol to issue assets on #bitcoin and Lightning.
— Lightning Labs⚡️ (@lightning) May 16, 2023
With this release, developers have the core set of features to bitcoinize the dollar in a chain-efficient manner! ⛓️https://t.co/7WmeDjNnM2
The Taproot Assets Protocol is designed to operate “maximally off-chain” in order to avoid the network congestion that has become an unfortunate characteristic of the Bitcoin network since the inception of the BRC-20 token standard by anonymous developer “Domo” on March 8.
Lightning Labs said Protocol users can soon integrate BRC-20 assets into the Lightning Network, with wallets, exchanges and merchants ported over instead of needing to “bootstrap a new ecosystem” from scratch.
Domo has previously said the Taproot Assets Protocol is a far “better solution” for minting new assets on Bitcoin when compared to the pre-existing methods like JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), as it allows for users to easily transfer to the Lightning network for “fast and cheap transactions.”
The overwhelming majority of BRC-20 tokens created thus far utilize Ordinal inscriptions of JSON data to deploy token contracts, mint tokens and transfer them.
This method has drawn widespread criticism from developers who claim the process costs four times as much in transaction fees compared to if they just used binary.
The Taproot Assets Protocol is the rebranded version of the original “Taro” protocol. Lightning Labs was forced to change the name of the software following what it called a “frivolous” trademark infringement suit filed against them by blockchain development firm Tari Labs on Dec. 8 last year.
Related: Ordinals and BRC-20 will disappear in a matter of months, says JAN3 CEO
The total value of BRC-20 tokens briefly surpassed the $1 billion mark on May 9 but has since shrunk back down to $500 million, a drop of nearly 50%.
Magazine: $3.4B of Bitcoin in a popcorn tin — The Silk Road hacker’s story
Macro guru Lyn Alden says that stablecoins are currently serving two main use cases in this decade. In a new interview with Anthony Pompliano, Alden says that as a digital representation of currencies, stablecoins are crucial to the operation of crypto exchanges. “Stablecoins are serving two significant roles right now. One is as a unit […]
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