How Blockchain Commons Is Improving Individual Access To The Bitcoin Network

Share This Post

Standards put forth by the open-source software team at Blockchain Commons will help individuals get the most out of Bitcoin.

The below is a direct excerpt of Marty’s Bent Issue #1144: “Gordian principles and software standards.” Sign up for the newsletter here.

via Blockchain Commons

I had the pleasure of sitting down and interviewing Christopher Allen and Wolf McNally from the Blockchain Commons project earlier this afternoon. Blockchain Commons is a group of open source developers focused on building open source tools and standards with interoperability in mind. I thoroughly enjoyed the conversation because it forced me to get back to first principles and think deeply about the precedents that are being set today by those building software that deals with an individual’s access to the Bitcoin network.

There are so many small details that have been abstracted away by wallet software that most users are completely unaware of when creating their key pairs. Is it a single sig or a multisig? What is the derivation path of the particular xpub you are using to produce receive addresses? Is your wallet software able to construct and/or broadcast pre-signed bitcoin transactions (PSBTs)? This may sound like gibberish to many of you freaks, but these small details matter. And, more importantly, keeping these small details in mind to loosely agree upon base level standards for those building wallet software so that users of different wallets can transact with each other seamlessly. With the overarching goal being to minimize the stress around securing sats while maintaining more than sufficient sovereignty and privacy.

The decisions we make today around best practices when building wallet software will have a material effect on the ability of users with different wallets to transact with each other with the utmost confidence. Creating standards that stay true to the Gordian principles put forth by the team at Blockchain Commons seems like a good idea to me.

via Blockchain Commons

Check out the podcast if you get a chance. I think you’ll learn a lot about the type of adversarial thinking that, when implemented effectively, adds to the accessibility and security of Bitcoin.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

FLOKI,  PEPE & BONK Consolidating at the Gains—Is This an Indication of the Beginning of a Memecoin Mania?

The post FLOKI,  PEPE & BONK Consolidating at the Gains—Is This an Indication of the Beginning of a Memecoin Mania appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News The Bitcoin price is consolidating

Binance Expands Compliance Team for Stronger Regulation

The post Binance Expands Compliance Team for Stronger Regulation appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Binance is significantly expanding its compliance team by 34% by the end of 2024, aiming to

Ripple Mints 10.5 Million RLUSD Tokens as Launch Nears

The post Ripple Mints 105 Million RLUSD Tokens as Launch Nears appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Ripple Labs has taken another big step in preparing its RLUSD stablecoin for launch by minting

Dogecoin Price Chart Flashes Clean Bull Flag At $0.38, Here’s The Next Target

The Dogecoin price has recently exhibited a classic bull flag pattern on its price chart, a technical indicator often signaling continued upward momentum The Dogecoin price has mostly traded below

Venture Capitalist Cites Funding, Talent for Web3 Development Surge in Emerging Markets

A venture capitalist says emerging markets, particularly India, are becoming hubs for Web3 development due to attractive funding, talent, and ecosystems India: Go-to Place for Recruiting Web3

Crypto Experts Says DOGE, WLTQ, And DOT Are 3 Altcoins That Will Shake The Crypto Market In January 2025

The post Crypto Experts Says DOGE, WLTQ, And DOT Are 3 Altcoins That Will Shake The Crypto Market In January 2025 appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News As the crypto market continues to evolve,