7 Reasons why the Lightning Network is Growing

For anyone who has been following the bitcoin ecosystem you must have heard of something called the Lightning Network. It’s one of the…

7  Reasons why the Lightning Network is Growing

7 Reasons why the Bitcoin Lightning Network is Growing

For anyone who has been following the bitcoin ecosystem you must have heard of something called the Lightning Network. It’s one of the most talked about topic in the bitcoin community and for right reason as it is developed to help solve the bitcoin scalability problem.

As of Sept 2019, the total volume of money transferred using the Lightning Network has crossed $6.7 million or 819 BTC and has seen a trade growth of 624% in the matter of one year.

What it Lightning Network?

Lightning Network was introduced in 2015 as a ‘Layer-2’ payment protocol which would run on top of the existing bitcoin blockchain allowing ‘off-chain’ transactions leading to higher transaction-per-second (TPS)and a much lower fees.

Two users can easily trade bitcoin using lightning network by setting up an ‘off-chain’ payment channel using a multi-signature bitcoin wallet. Using this payment channel any number of transactions can happen between them without interacting with the main bitcoin blockchain.

In case there is no direct channel between two users, the payment can be routed via other channel(s) that are connected to the final destination, this is called Network Routing.

7 Reasons why the Bitcoin Lightning Network has seen growth

1) Instantaneous Transactions

Currently bitcoin blockchain transactions take about an average of 10 minutes to confirm since that is the time every new block gets added to the blockchain by the miners. Depending on the fees, the confirmation time on average can range between 10 mins - 2 hours.

Through Lightning Network the transactions would confirm in a matter of seconds making them almost instantaneous.

2) Low Fees

The bitcoin blockchain fees varies according to the market but usually lies in the range of $0.2 — $4 to get the transaction confirmed in the next block. This is not always the case, as we saw during the December 2017 price rally where the fees reached as high as $38. As adoption increases so does the load on the blocks and the fees usually goes up.

With Lightning Network the fees ranges between 1–10 satoshi ($0.00008 — $0.0008) making them ideal for quick daily transactions.

3) Less congestion on Bitcoin Network

Since the Lightning Network runs on ‘second layer’ without interacting with the main bitcoin blockchain, the bitcoin network would remain less congested making it more scalable for adoption.

4) Cross-chain Atomic Swaps

Atomic Swaps links payment channels across different blockchains (cross-chain) allowing users to ‘swap’ their cryptocurrency into another without using third-party custodian services.

Cross-chain atomic swaps can occur in Lightning Network off-chain as long as both chains share the same cryptographic hash function. The transactions are 100% trustless, instant with negligible fees.

5) Security First

The team behind Lightning Network take security very seriously. There are protocols within the Lightning Network that are deployed to make sure payments are secure and and not vulnerable to attacks.

Lighting Network uses Onion Routing to safely route HTLC’s (Hash-Time-Locked-Contracts, basically a conditional payment) within the network. Similar technology is used by Tor.

6) Active Development

Developments within Lightning Network are very active. New features and upgrades to the software happen regularly and the team is committed to make Lightning Network into a secure, stable solution to scale bitcoin.

7) User friendly Design

The Lightening Network User Interface is designed to provide a seamless user experience. Tankred Hase, lead app developer at lightning, in an official announcement mentions:

We’ve designed the mobile app to be approachable for a wide range of users. That’s why we began with a clean user interface and a goal to hide complexity and make the app more accessible to new users.

Lightning Network may sound complicated if you deep-dive into the underlying technology and how it works but to an average user who wants to simply send transactions such information is not really of interest as long as they can send transactions easily and securely.

A few issues with Lightning Network

Participants have to be online: Unlike the traditional bitcoin transactions which are on-chain, Lightning Network transactions occur off-chain and interact via nodes. This requires the participants of the transaction to be online when the transaction is made.

Private keys stay online making it susceptible to attacks: Offline or cold storage is said to be the most secure method of storing bitcoin right now but this is not possible with Lightning Network. To use the Lightning Network the funds have to be stored in something similar to a hot wallet making them more susceptible to attacks. This also requires monitoring the network, although, there are services present that can help with this.

It is still in early stages of its development: Despite active development one cannot deny the fact it is still an early time for Lightning Network. It is very likely and also expected for it (as is with any new code) to contain undiscovered bugs and potential vulnerabilities.

Lightning Network recently was flagged for a dangerous bug that was present in the code which would cause users to lose their funds. Rusty Russel, Lightning network developer mentioned in the full disclosure published on Sept 27,

“An attacker can claim to open a [lighting payments] channel but either not pay to the peer, or not pay the full amount”

This bug was initially flagged to the public on Aug 30, by Russel and according to the disclosure it has been fixed and all major Lightning Network services providers have already upgraded their software.

Latest developments in Lightning Network:

Lightning Network Deamon (lndmon)

On July 26, Lightning Network developer Valentine Wallace released an official announcement of the alpha release of lndmon, a drop-in, dockerized monitoring solution for lnd.

The main goal of this release is to predict network issues before they occur. It works as a monitoring tool that node operates and users can use to track transactions and how their channels change over time. Wallace mentions:

“We believe lndmon will contribute to the stability and improvement rate of Lightning by providing real-time feedback on events as they unfold in the network.”

Lightening Loop (Loop In/Loop Out)

Lightning Loop is a non-custodial service offered by Lightning Labs to bridge on-chain and off-chain Bitcoin using submarine swaps.

The current Loop software provides two iterations Loop In (on-chain to off-chain) and Loop Out (off-chain to on-chain).

Increase in Lightning Network Nodes and channels

Lightning Network has seen an impressive growth since its inception. As of this writing, the number of nodes has reached 10,045 with the number of channels crossing 35,000, a growth rate of 193% compared to last year where the number of channels were 12,210.

Source: https://explorer.acinq.co/

In Conclusion:

Lightning Network is a very exciting and promising addition to bitcoin. Its active development and a strong team behind it makes for a strong case for its bright future.

Although it is still early to tell how exactly this piece of technology would ultimately shape out to be. Despite carrying some functional risks, its adoption is rising fairly well and there is a lot of research and development that needs to go into it to make it scalable and secure.