âItâs contingent upon SegWit.â
Lightning Labs developer Joseph Poon is talking about bitcoinâs Lightning Network, the top-layer network that could potentially boost bitcoinâs transaction capacity to millions of transactions per second, but the same can be said of most of the other technical improvements for the network presented at Construct 2017, CoinDeskâs inaugural San Francisco developer conference.
In many presentations, it seemed as if moving forward with the project, a more than $15bn economic network that sprang from only open-source code, is wholly dependent on SegWit.
The problem, of course, is that (for a complex set of technical and political reasons) it might not activate, a factor that continues to put stress on its development team.
Politecnico di Milano professor Ferdinando M Ametrano told CoinDesk:
âFrom the technical point of view, SegWit is crucial for bitcoinâs evolution.â
Murmurings from other attendees seemed to bolster this view, but any action still seems far. As of Tuesday, one new mining pool is flagging support for the change.
If it continues to do so, this will bring support for the upgrade up to 30% or 31%. Still, itâs short of the required threshold of 95% necessary for activation.
One of the best-known benefits is Lightning Network. SegWit moves around transaction data in such a way that it solves a problem known as âtransaction malleability,â which makes transactions using the top-layer network more secure and user-friendly.
âYou can kind of make it work without SegWit. The problem is that it sucks,â Poon explained in his presentation.
Elsewhere, others made a similar argument.
The most obvious presentation to dive into examples was Bitcoin Core developer Eric Lombrozoâs presentation on SegWit, where he called it âthe most exciting thingâ heâs worked on so far as a bitcoin developer.
He mentioned that it can help enable more advanced scripting, meaning that bitcoin users can lock up their funds in other new ways, and that it would enable different signature schemes, such as Schnorr signatures or even signatures that are resistant to quantum computers.
And, other attendees were quick to point out other pieces.
âI think that more technical issues might be lost, like that signature validation will become linear rather than quadratic,â Ametrano said.
In conversation, Lightning Labs developer Olaoluwa Osuntokun further noted how it makes transactions safer for users of hardware wallets.
Although most of bitcoinâs active developers support the change, some still believe itâs proven contentious.
Drew Rasmussen, CTO of OTCXN, a startup looking to apply blockchain to the forex market, talked about it more from the frame of reference of a bitcoin outsider whoâs been more focused in the enterprise blockchain work.
âI think it would be something good to implement,â he said, though he acknowledged that the communityâs skepticism of changes could be whatâs holding it back.
So, what happens if it doesnât activate?
Despite the seeming urgency around the change, Bitcoin Core contributor Cory Fields, who also works at MITâs Digital Currency Initiative, said he doesnât yet believe heâs heard a compelling argument for why it shouldnât be activated. It seems the alternatives arenât yet clear.
âSegWit is such a clear and obvious win. Iâve yet to hear a downside argument to it,â he told attendees.
He framed the issue as one of politics, not technology.
Thereâs no way to tell the future, but itâs notable that when asked the same question, attendees seemed to take an optimistic view of the situation.
Osuntokun mentioned that Lightning has a backup plan if SegWit doesnât activate. But, in the mean time, since SegWit offers a better network, theyâre operating under the assumption that it will trigger.
âIf itâs the best design, it makes sense to go toward that,â he said.
Ametrano echoed the growing opinion that bitcoin is slow to change, and that thatâs actually a good thing.
âI think itâs a win-win situation for bitcoin, because if SegWit is accepted, and I think it should be because itâs moving bitcoinâs technical boundary forward, this will improve bitcoin a lot. But if it is not approved, this will demonstrate that bitcoin cannot be manipulated or managed, not even by Bitcoin Core,â he said.
Osuntokun was similarly positive in remarks, guessing that SegWit would activate in March.
When asked why, he shrugged and said only:
âMarch feels right.â
Images via Cryptograffiti and Pete Rizzo