Three years in the making, bitcoinâs first sidechain âLiquidâ is now live.
Launched by San Francisco startup Blockstream, Liquid is arguably the most advanced implementation of a technology called sidechains thatâs long been a holy grail for bitcoin coders (though whatâs being launched today may be a watered-down version of the original âtrustlessâ vision). Still, that doesnât dilute the capabilities of what the company, founded by bitcoinâs top open-source coders in 2014, has created.
Built off of the live blockchain, Liquid will now be used to carry large volumes of transactions at a higher speed for several of bitcoinâs largest companies.
A notable milestone, Liquid has been in progress for quite some time. Blockstream first unveiled the idea in 2015, then the sidechain was launched in beta â being put to the test on bitcoinâs main network â last year. Today, however, the network is finally opening up for all of Blockstreamâs partners to use for real transactions.
Initial users included 23 bitcoin companies, including exchanges, brokers and other institutions, who will help to manage the sidechain, as well as use Liquid to send transactions.
The full list includes include Altonomy, Atlantic Financial, Bitbank, Bitfinex, Bitmax, BitMEX, Bitso, BTCBOX, BTSE, Buull Exchange, DGroup, Coinone, Crypto Garage, GOPAX (operated by Streami), Korbit, L2B Global, OKCoin, The Rock Trading, SIX Digital Exchange, Unocoin, Xapo, XBTOÂ and Zaif.
With many of bitcoinâs big exchanges on board, the companies make up 50 percent to 60 percent of bitcoinâs trading volume, according to CoinMarketCap.
âThis will bolster the bitcoin ecosystem because you can trade more securely and rapidly,â Blockstream CSO Samson Mow said in interview.
He told CoinDesk:
âItâs ready for commercial use. At this point, itâs just a matter of getting exchanges to integrate.â
On a more technical level, the product works in a way thatâs akin to a kind of digital alchemy.
An exchange converts its bitcoin into âLBTCâ â the liquid bitcoin token â which is pegged to actual bitcoin. Once sent there, exchanges can move money around securely and much more quickly than on the main bitcoin chain.
âIf thereâs one thing our traders need, itâs speed. Liquid delivers that in spades,â said Paolo Ardoino, CTO of Bitfinex, in a statement. âLiquidâs instant settlements will allow our traders to achieve faster bitcoin deposits and withdrawals, more efficient arbitrage, and even better pricing through tighter spreads.â
But, thereâs a huge caveat, one that long-time bitcoin enthusiasts are sure not to miss.
Liquid is not exactly a ârealâ sidechain, or at least not the type Blockstream was founded to research and build. Instead of building a sidechain that allows users to swap bitcoins for sidechain coins without a trusted third party, Blockstream built whatâs called a âfederated sidechain.â
Federated sidechains rely on a group of companies â in this case, Blockstreamâs launch partners â to collectively manage the sidechain. (A white paper released last year explains in more detail the technicals of the specific type of federated sidechain Liquid uses.)
For this reason, critics like pseudonymous bitcoin subreddit moderator ThePiachu have called the tech ânot innovativeâ â even as far back as three years ago. âLiquid looks like a very interesting project, but itâs not the sidechains we are looking for,â the moderator wrote.
While this might seem like a catch in the development, for the companies involved it doesnât matter all that much, since Liquid helps solve more than one problem thatâs been bothering them. In addition to moving money faster, partners will also be able to launch tokens on the platform, representing financial instruments, fiat currencies or crypto assets.
Mow went as far as to argue that the sidechain works better than the smart contract blockchain ethereum for launching tokens.
On top of that, in the coming weeks, Blockstream will be releasing a wallet specifically made for Liquid transactions. Plus, the companyâs bitcoin wallet GreenAddress already supports Liquid. Hardware wallet providers Ledger and Trezor have unveiled plans to adopt the technology also.
While that sounds like quite the momentum, itâs been a long road for Liquid.
âFrom a high-level view, Blockstream was founded on two-way peg sidechains. So, you could say Liquid is essentially our company purpose. If you look at it that way, itâs been a few years in the making, but actual R&D has been two years,â Mow said.
So, why did it take so long for Blockstream to build this?
âItâs difficult to launch something like Liquid because it requires security engineering on both software and hardware. Itâs not something we want to rush,â Mow contended.
This seems to be proven by recent events. As explained in more detail in a recent blog post, Blockstream argued that when they heard about an unconfirmed security breach of major hardware thatâs currently rocking the technology world, they shipped their hardware out for an audit â just in case.
Theyâre being picky about their security, Mow said, because they have big plans for the sidechain â that being that the technology could potentially carry a large chunk of bitcoinâs total transactions.
Speaking to this, Mow told CoinDesk:
âIt will potentially be transacting billions of dollars worth of bitcoin a day.â
Still, even though the technology is live now, thereâs a long way to go before the platform reaches that kind of scale. According to the Blockstream team, theyâll continue to work with exchanges and wallets to integrate Liquid into more platforms.
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