Transaction fees on monero, the 10th largest cryptocurrency network, have fallen sharply after last Thursdayâs system-wide software update.
The reduction comes in the wake of the platformâs activation of a highly-anticipated new form of cryptography named âbulletproofs,â a new technology that seeks to make the monero networkâs privacy features more scalable by restructuring how its confidential transactions are verified.
According to data published by BitInfoCharts, average monero fees fell from about $0.54 cents on Thursday to roughly $0.021 cents as of Saturday â a 96 percent drop.
Such a dramatic shift was previously predicted by monero developers speaking to CoinDesk. âI think you can safely say a typical [transaction] fee goes down by more than 95 percent,â monero core developer âmoneromoooâ remarked last week.
Moneromooo also said that fee reductions could even be lower, depending on the kind of transaction that users create.
Alongside bulletproofs, the upgrade, performed via a mechanism called a hard fork, contained other features intended to improve privacy on the platform, as well as new code to deter manufacturers from building specialized mining hardware for monero.
Speaking on IRC last week, developers celebrated the upgrade, with Sarang Noether, a cryptographer at the Monero Research Lab that led the work on the bulletproofs implementation, writing that âitâs gonna be great seeing the blockchain growth charts.â
There were also predictions that the drop on fees might open the door to additional uses for XMR, the cryptocurrency that powers the monero blockchain. Core developer âhycâ said that the upgrade was âdefinitely making the notion of micropayments more palatable again.â
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