Author

Topic: [2017-07-02] Is The Scaling Debate Hurting Bitcoin? (Read 3418 times)

legendary
Activity: 3164
Merit: 1127
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
While the elephants are measuring their strength who suffers the consequences is bitcoin and its holders

Look now for example, most people are afraid and wait until August to know what will happen
hero member
Activity: 490
Merit: 501
Yes, the continuing debate on how to solve Bitcoin's scaling challenge has been going on for some time and the problem is that while the problem keeps on going big there was no clear consensus reached as to how best solved the problem. Until that meeting in New York where a consensus was eventually accepted by many stakeholders. And yes, it is also true, that the road for the solution can still be long and winding.

This is really hurting Bitcoin which resulted into losing its dominance to other alternative coins. But though I don't also believe that soon another coin will replace the Bitcoin throne, still it is something worth looking at and analyze why this has been so.

We are all optimistic that after August we can see a better and more robust Bitcoin all ready to face all the challenges and problems thrown its way.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
It feels like the Bitcoin scaling debate has been around almost as long as Bitcoin itself. How Bitcoin scalability is best achieved, how we catapult this exciting forerunner of the digital currency scene into the global mainstream, remains at the very heart of the blockchain future. But, while the growth in popularity of Bitcoin, and blockchain technology as a whole, has been nothing short of explosive, the accompanying scaling row has become painstakingly slow and turgid by comparison. So much so, in fact, it could now be seriously affecting Bitcoin’s development, threatening its status as ‘Crypto King’, and giving other currencies and technologies the opportunity to accelerate their expansion ahead of it.

To briefly recap, the Bitcoin scaling solution has two broad churches. Some want to increase the block size to speed up transactions and relieve congestion in the system, while others, who fear an increase may deter new users and impact long-term wide appeal, favour a technical upgrade called SegWit (Segregated Witness) which would allow people to create a web of payment channels to service all users on the network.

We are approaching a key milestone in this protracted journey. On August 1st, a limited activation of a SegWit soft fork is in the offing. How the community reacts to this over the coming weeks will be important to the future direction – or directions – of travel for Bitcoin. But even so, this is merely a stepping stone. The road to a resolution could still be long and winding from then on.

Meanwhile, we are seeing consistent huge spikes in the value of Ether. At the time of writing, Ether is up 5000% in price since the start of the year. It has increased 320% over the past month alone, with Bitcoin up ‘just’ 60% in the same period. According to website Happening.watch, Ethereum trading volumes have actually started to surpass those of Bitcoin recently. The momentum is undoubtedly with Ethereum. The two of them remain the leading lights of the cryptocurrency landscape but others are emerging on an almost daily basis, and growing at an increasingly rapid rate.

The global trading platform eToro has a Cryptocurrency CopyFund, which currently contains Bitcoin and Ethereum, with asset allocation determined by market cap. You can trade CFDs on the CopyFund – effectively as it were a portfolio of the two crypto assets. But traders on the platform want a lot more. Belief has shifted. Crypto traders no longer see this as a two-horse race. The eventual ‘winners’ in the sector may be waiting in the wings. Traders want to diversify. So eToro are accelerating plans to introduce other digital currencies to the platform and to the CopyFund, with the likes of Litecoin, Dash and Ripple potentially next in line.

Bitcoin hasn’t lost its crypto crown yet, and may never be dethroned of course, but the odds are shortening. And the irony is, for such a fast-growth innovative technology, in the grand scheme of things, it just might not be fast enough.

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/scaling-debate-hurting-bitcoin/
Jump to: