How will the Lightning Network change bitcoin?
Although it might be too soon to know, itâs a question everyoneâs seemingly asking following tests that take the long-anticipated tech closer to launch. The networkâs garnered its fair share of excitement over the past few months, so much so that individuals and businesses are looking to take advantage of its cheap, fast payments.
Out of this comes a small Japanese startup called Nayuta, which has been experimenting with adding Lightning payments to the Internet of Things, where everything from door locks to BMWs are connected to the internet to increase efficiency.
With this experimentation, Nayuta is exploring a couple of implications of the tech.
First, the startup believes Lightning could bring value to the Internet of Things in a way that old payment systems and bitcoin couldnât because theyâre both simply too slow.
Second, itâs one of the first earnest businesses working on a product built on Lightning, showing that the off-chain network might actually have a business proposition, even this early on.
Nayuta started off in 2015 by adding normal bitcoin transactions to the Internet of Things in a range of prototypes.
But, like others using bitcoin, they were disappointed by its limitations. They found instant âzero-confirmationâ transactions werenât secure enough and that 10 minutes was too long to wait for a transaction to be secure.
Then Lightning came along, the idea being itâs possible to actually make more secure instant payments (though there are still some caveats). Since itâs faster than traditional payments, Nayuta decided it was the âonlyâ solution to Internet of Thingâs desire for payments that are as fast as the internet connections that fuel them.
One recently popular Internet of Things product is the so-called âSmartLock.â Rather than requiring the metal keys weâre all used to (just one more thing to remember), the rightful owner can use their smartphone to unlock it.
Showing the companyâs switch in gears toward Lightning, they released a proof of concept of such a lock that opens only once itâs sent a Lightning payment.
Neither of these things are particularly useful, at least in the current form (why would anyone want to require a payment to unlock something?). But, as Nayuta sees it, these proof-of-concepts demonstrate how real-time payments can for Internet of Things more broadly, one of millions examples being a sensor gathering data about an ocean, and a researcher directly paying the sensor a small fee over the Internet to get that information.
The test payment was made between Nayutaâs homegrown Lightning software implementation, dubbed âThunderbirdâ, and c-Lightning, an software implementation by bitcoin infrastructure startup Blockstream.
In that way, not only does Nayuta âopen the doorâ to interesting Lightning use cases, it also diversifies the number of Lightning software implementations there are, which the company thinks is important, because, it believes, some features are missing from current Lightning implementations.
âWe do not think Lightning is ready,â Nayuta CEO Kenichi Kurimoto told CoinDesk.
All this feeds into the second interesting thing Nayuta is doing: Itâs one of the first companies to build a business around Lightning, showing that perhaps Lightning has a business proposition.
The handful of Lightning startups out there so far, such as Lightning Labs and Paris-based ACINQ are focused on the low-level technology, not building a product that their company around a particular application of Lightning.
Though, Kurimoto admitted theyâre not really being sure what to make out of all the prototypes theyâve launched over the last few years.
âWe did not decide the product future. Currently weâre concentrating on development of the [Lightning Network] software,â Kurimoto said, adding that one company that they canât disclose due to NDAA using their software so far.
Even so, Nayuta sees business promise in this area. Internet of Things payments have been floated for a long time, with even the likes giant payment processor Visa launching payment solutions in this area.
But, to Kurimoto, the current financial infrastructure is behind the times.
If refrigerators want to pay grocery stores and users want to use micropayments to pay for video and so forth, payments often need to be really small and fast. The current financial infrastructure wouldnât be able to handle it.
Kurimoto said:
âThe Lightning Network is the only solution for real-time transactions.â
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