Reading
TBW #69: Back to School!

Twitter Share Article

Linkedin Share article

Facebook share article

TBW #69: Back to School!

Read all about The Big Whale's 69th Premium newsletter.

Hello Whales and welcome to the little newcomers who have just joined us in the Smart edition!

The editorial byRaphaël Bloch

Back to school 🤓

What a pleasure to be back with you! After just over 2 weeks off, we're back with Gregory and Louis Tellier, who has just joined the editorial team at The Big Whale 🔥.

For those who don't know Louis yet, he's one of the best crypto journalists in Europe (ex-BFM Business and ex-Agefi), and thanks to his arrival, we'll be able to put out even more scoops, interviews, investigations and reports.

Today, the 3 of us are in Biarritz for the opening of Surfin'Bitcoin!

This 4th edition, which kicks off this morning, promises to be very interesting. In addition to panels and round tables on bitcoin (the programme is here), this year the organisers wanted to focus on fundamental research and the Lightning Network (more on that below 👇), which is a very good thing.

However, this choice shows the extent to which cryptos are still a highly technological subject and that we're still struggling to talk about uses... Obviously Rome wasn't built in a day, and as Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin reminded us in an interview a few weeks ago, "Web3 takes longer to build because you also have to create the infrastructure". Duly noted.

The fact remains that it would be a mistake to consider that the Web3 industry can continue to develop solely on the promise of "future" use cases, because democratisation will, come what may, require something real, something concrete, otherwise in another 10 years we'll find ourselves in Biarritz and at other conferences talking about technology again and again, which is all very well, but not enough 😎.

The Big News_

Written byGrégory Raymond

Our exclusive news 🗣

👉 Woorton acquired by B2C2

A new page is about to be written for Woorton. According to our information, the French market maker is to be acquired by its British rival B2C2.

Woorton was founded in 2018 by Charlie Méraud, Zahreddine Touag and Karim Sabba. The amount of the deal is not available, and the deal is expected to be made official in the coming weeks.

The Paris-based company had been struggling since Genesis, one of the main investment firms affected by the collapse of the FTX exchange platform, froze its activities. Like other players, Woorton had placed some of its cash with Genesis.

The US liquidator of FTX announced at the end of June that it had recovered $7 billion out of a total of $8.7 billion missing. Many creditors, led by Woorton, can thus hope to recover a substantial part of their assets.

"Some players are weakened and others are taking advantage of the situation to consolidate their position," murmurs a witness to the operation.

The takeover by B2C2 will enable the London-based market maker to expand in France (it set up a subsidiary at the end of July) and, above all, to acquire a start-up that holds a digital asset service provider (PSAN) registration issued by the Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF).

Although the AMF will have to revalidate the new entity's PSAN, such a deal saves time.

B2C2 will have its work cut out for it, as Flowdesk, the French nugget in the sector, is in the process of completing a fundraising round of around €40 million. According to our information, its valuation should reach several hundred million euros.

BT

🎙 Listen to a replay of this week's Big Talk with guest Sébastion Gouspillou: "Where is the development of Bitcoin in El Salvador?"

The Big Analyse_

Edited byRaphaël Bloch

Lightning Network: A revolution that's a long time coming

JL

Considered to be the miracle solution for improving the performance of the Bitcoin network, the Lightning Network is still far from fulfilling all its promises, particularly in terms of user experience.

Almost 15 years after its creation, no one, apart from a few, questions the viability of bitcoin any more. Everyone, even in traditional finance, agrees that the first cryptocurrency in history is here to stay.

This summer, the boss of BlackRock, which is none other than the largest asset manager on the planet ($9 trillion in assets under management), explained all the good he thought of bitcoin, which in 2017 he still considered an asset for "crooks".

"It's an international asset" that could "overtake national currencies", Larry Fink told US television.

The biggest cryptocurrency on the market ($500 billion in capitalisation) is, however, still a long way from becoming part of our everyday lives 👀.

While people invest in bitcoin, few use it as a means of payment to do their shopping or buy products of any kind. And for good reason, apart from the fact that few shops accept bitcoin, its network is not efficient enough. Not 'efficient' enough in the sense that it can't handle too many transactions.

It can only handle 7 transactions per second (that's theoretically more than 40,000 for Visa), and if there are too many, it becomes congested and transaction fees soar. Who would want to pay €10 in fees for a €5 or €6 transaction? Nobody 🤯. Not to mention that you have to wait around 10 minutes for a transaction to be recorded in the blockchain...

It was to solve this problem that Thaddeus Dryja and Joseph Poon came up with the Lightning Network (LN) a few years ago. They presented their solution in 2015 and published the Lightning Network white paper in 2016 (available here).

The Lightning Network has been available since 2018. The idea is simple: rather than recording every transaction on the Bitcoin network, the Lightning Network allows its users to make transactions OUTSIDE the Bitcoin blockchain - these are offchain transactions - by creating parallel payment channels.

These channels then enable instant, low-cost transactions between participants. As transactions take place, the balances in the channel are updated. Participants can adjust the balances based on their transactions.

"Lightning Network is a second layer of Bitcoin that handles all the small transactions that Bitcoin won't," explains Josef Tětek, Bitcoin analyst for Trezor, a Czech start-up specialising in digital asset custody.

When they wish, participants can close their channel. Final balances are recorded on the Bitcoin blockchain. Transactions made outside the channel are consolidated into a single transaction on the Bitcoin blockchain, and that's it 💡 !

Before we go any further, just a few figures about the Lightning Network 🤓.

Today, there are just over 16,000 nodes on the LN network (almost 47,000 nodes for the Bitcoin network).

Nodes are essential to the network because they enable all transactions to be verified and validated. The more computing power (with computers) you mobilise for your node, the more essential it will become. This is why the most widely used nodes in the LN network are those managed by companies like France's Acinq - in which Bpifrance has invested in 2019.

The thousands of nodes in the network feed 68,000 public payment channels. In these payment channels, there are 4,600 locked bitcoins, or roughly $120 million (at the current price of bitcoin), which partly ensure liquidity on the network.

According to estimates, there would be between 10.000 and 15,000 additional payment channels that are not declared, and therefore not public.

That's it for the figures!

So let's get back to how the Lightning Network system works, which therefore seems, at least on paper, perfect! Except that in practice things are a little more complicated 😅.

"Some people have made too many promises about the Lightning Network, saying that it would make it easy to send a few satoshis (1 satoshi = 0.00000001 bitcoin) instantly, when this is not the case today," explains Simon Glâtre, data analyst at Sato, a Canadian company listed on the stock exchange and specialising in bitcoin mining.

Of course, not everyone shares this opinion (which is to be expected).

For some, such as the French company Acinq, which developed one of the 4 main implementations of the LN (which is called Eclair), the LN has made enormous progress. "Bitcoin and the Lightning Network represent a real paradigm shift, so it's only natural that it should take time to arrive at a system that is easy for everyone to use," explains Pierre-Marie Padiou, co-founder and CEO of Acinq.

In the meantime, to be more effective, the Lightning Network needs to improve on a number of points:

👉 Liquidity

You have to imagine the Lightning Network as a system with balls (the satoshis) and tubes (the payment channels). To make a payment, you have to push marbles into the tubes.

As long as you have marbles in your wallet, you can push marbles and therefore make payments, but it gets complicated when you run out of marbles in your wallet. "You simply can't make any more payments while you're waiting to put money back in," sums up Simon Glâtre of Sato.

To make the system run more smoothly and avoid this kind of problem, several players have entered the market: the Lightning Service Provider (LSP).

These players are an interface between the user and the Lightning Network. "The role of LSPs is to make users forget the fact that they have to manage their liquidity and always have marbles in their wallet," explains Josef Tětek of Trezor.

There are several types of LSP:

- there are those that are only LSPs such as Lightspark (the start-up founded by David Marcus, the former mastermind behind Facebook's Libra project), Voltage or LNBIG.

- there are LN wallets that have decided to create their own LSP. This is the case with Phoenix (developed by Acinq), Breez or Bitkit.

There are currently around twenty LSPs on the market, which can supply Lightning Network users with satoshis when they need them. In practical terms, you want to send 100 euros (roughly 420,000 satoshis, at the current rate) to a friend, and a wallet like Breez will automatically provide you with the liquidity to 'push' your satoshis to your friend's wallet.

The only problem is that there is still a question about the volume of liquidity provided by the LSP. Because if the LSP doesn't provide enough liquidity, the user will very quickly be blocked, and a new channel will have to be opened to pay more money, which costs money in transaction fees. This system is clearly anything but optimal!

To improve matters, the 4 different implementations of the Lightning Network (Eclair, C-Lightning, LND, Rust-Lightning) are working on an improvement: 'splicing'.

This new feature would make it possible to have a single payment channel between the user and the LSP, whose capacities could be increased or decreased as required. Splicing is currently being implemented on Eclair and Core Lightning (developed by Blockstream).

Another feature is expected to improve liquidity management: trampoline routing. The idea is to delegate the search for the best path for a transaction to the largest nodes in the network, which should make transactions even smoother. Trampoline routing is already implemented in Phoenix, but only partially. "We are in the process of deploying it", confirms Pierre-Marie Padiou.

👉 Privacy

As we indicated above, there are currently just over 16,000 nodes on the Lightning Network. Every transaction passes through these nodes.

Today, the person initiating a transaction on a payment channel chooses the payment route, and the person receiving the transaction must give the address of his wallet to receive the payment. With this system, however, it is quite "simple" (although everything is relative) to start from the address of a wallet and trace all the transactions of a user.

To improve things, several developers have developed the "blinded paths" functionality. As the name suggests, the aim of a 'blinded path' is to muddy the waters. The idea is that the payment route is split in two: the first part is defined by whoever sends the funds and the second by whoever receives the funds. Pretty clever!

👉 Asynchronous payments

Anyone who has ever made a transaction on the Lightning Network knows this: you can only send money to someone if they are connected online to receive the funds 🙃.

When you physically pay in a shop, it's pretty straightforward as the merchant will be connected, but the situation is more complicated for remote payments. "If I'm not connected with my wallet, no one can send me money," Simon Glâtre points out.

This system is fairly inefficient, and to improve it, a new "asynchronous payment" feature is being created.

The idea of this feature is to allow you to make a payment that will be on hold and will be completed as soon as the other person connects. "Today we can have funds stuck on the network for days because someone hasn't connected. This is a real problem. It's one of the features that will change things the most," explains Simon Glâtre.

👉 Wallets

Last but not least, there's the subject of wallets, which is undoubtedly the most important topic. And why is that? Because it raises the philosophical question of holding bitcoins.

Today, there are two types of wallet on the market: custodial and non-custodial (you are the holder of your funds).

While most of the community would like to hold their bitcoins themselves on a non-custodial wallet, it is clearly custodial wallets that are the easiest to use. The best known of these is the Wallet of Satoshi. "It's fairly simple to use and the advantage of custodial is that you don't have to manage anything apart from your transactions," explains Lounès Ksouri, an engineer at LNMarkets and Lightning Network specialist.

The downside of this system is that the Wallet of Satoshi which holds your bitcoins. "With them, you don't actually own the funds. In reality, you are not using the LN, but a centralised player who is going to do it for you. Wallet of Satoshi has a big node and they have plenty of payment channels," Simon Glâtre points out.

On the non-custodial side, there are plenty of wallets like Phoenix from Acinq, but to use them you need more control. "You have to open your channels yourself," explains Josef Tětek. "You can't want to be sovereign over your cryptos and not manage anything yourself," counters Pierre-Marie Padiou.

In an attempt to find a happy medium, some are arguing for a hybrid system that would be based partly on custodial: federated wallets.

The aim of "federated wallets", like Fedimint, is to take the best of custodial (efficiency in particular) and the best of non-custodial with the protection of privacy. The idea is to designate a custodial body for a limited number of holders.

"One of the obvious applications is the family circle," explains Simon Glâtre. But it could also very well be managed on a larger scale, he stresses. However, it's not certain that everyone will become a fan!

TO

We need you!

If you'd like to help us make The Big Whale even better (features, offers...), you can fill in this little form. It's in English for our English-speaking friends. 😎

Thanks again 🐳!

The Big Focus_

Written byRaphaël Bloch

Paul Grewal (Coinbase): "The context is becoming much more favourable in the United States"

MP

After some very complicated months for the crypto industry, with cascading investigations from the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), things are looking up in the US, according to Coinbase's general counsel. In an exclusive interview with The Big Whale, the American explains in detail why, and also looks back at the exchange platform's ambitions in Europe.

The rest is available on The Big Whale's website. 🐳

Everything that matters in Web3. Each week.
25€/month
Try insider for free, for 30 days.
Subscribe
All that matters in crypto.
Deciphering, insights, Data. Access the best of the ecosystem.
Subscribre
In this article
No items found.
Read next
No items found.
In this category