Lightning Labs Chief: We’re Entering a ‘Bitcoin, not Blockchain’ World
The tables have turned on bitcoin doomsayers. This according to Elizabeth Stark, co-founder of Lightning Labs in a conversation with Yahoo Finance The Final Round. In a turn of events, cryptocurrencies have begun to steal the show again away from blockchain. It’s a far cry from the San Francisco startup’s earlier days when Lightning decided to remove “bitcoin” from its marketing resources because at the time blockchain was king.”Now, I feel like we’ve entered into a ‘bitcoin, not blockchain’ world, where people understand the value of cryptocurrency technology and what these can bring,” said Stark to Yahoo, pointing to proof-of-work and public/private key cryptography that “make bitcoin special.”Stark reflected on the rise of blockchain before seemingly at the cost of bitcoin, the latter of which had become taboo in financial services. Lightning at the time was developing bitcoin software, and Stark and other developers knew that the banking industry’s decision to shun bitcoin was misinformed. Other blockchain veterans have previously pointed out that “blockchain doesn’t exist without bitcoin” because of the miner-fueled network. Stark and Lightning were vindicated with the rise in the market capitalization not only of bitcoin but all the leading cryptocurrencies at year-end 2017. While the prices have since pulled back, that’s actually not such a bad thing when you’re a developer in the bitcoin space. “Big price spikes aren’t good for us technical folks that are developing,” said Stark, adding she “wants things to be calm.”Lightning NetworkLightning is behind the Lightning Network software, which is in beta format. It sits atop Bitcoin to deliver faster transactions and more of them. Lightning Network can also be accessed via mobile. You hear a lot about the use cases for bitcoin being a store of value and for payments, the latter of which has been problematic amid lengthy and costly transactions. But the Lightning Network looks to solve that by facilitating transactions off the blockchain between the buyer and seller instead of relying on the volunteers to verify each transaction. But it’s still close enough to the blockchain if it’s needed. It opens the door to more possibilities for bitcoin and micropayments, as the Yahoo panel suggested. Stark provided a glimpse into the roadmap for the Lightning Network, including “many thousands of transactions per second and maybe someday even millions per second,” which dwarfs the capabilities of Visa. No wonder Visa executives feel threatened by bitcoin. Especially considering it remains early innings for bitcoin.”Bitcoin is a marathon, not a sprint. People wanted it to be a sprint,” said Stark. Featured image from Flickr/PICNIC Network