稳健,是 Gate 持续增长的核心动力。
真正的成长,不是顺风顺水,而是在市场低迷时依然坚定前行。我们或许能预判牛熊市的大致节奏,但绝无法精准预测它们何时到来。特别是在熊市周期,才真正考验一家交易所的实力。
Gate 今天发布了2025年第二季度的报告。作为内部人,看到这些数据我也挺惊喜的——用户规模突破3000万,现货交易量逆势环比增长14%,成为前十交易所中唯一实现双位数增长的平台,并且登顶全球第二大交易所;合约交易量屡创新高,全球化战略稳步推进。
更重要的是,稳健并不等于守成,而是在面临严峻市场的同时,还能持续创造新的增长空间。
欢迎阅读完整报告:https://www.gate.com/zh/announcements/article/46117
Controversial Bitcoin upgrade BIP-119 may be decided by end of year
Backed by prominent Bitcoin developers and firms, the long-dormant Bitcoin Improvement Proposal OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY, known as CTV or BIP-119, is now gathering steam
If finally approved, it could boost Bitcoin’s scalability, security and usability — particularly through the introduction of covenants and vaults that could improve self-custody and enable safer, smarter layer-2 applications such as Lightning and Ark
Bitcoin protocol upgrades are few and far between. They typically require years to activate thanks to Bitcoin’s decentralized governance structure. The last was Taproot in 2021
But BIP-119, proposed by Jeremy Rubin in 2019, is getting closer. In fact, some developers believe it could find consensus by the end of the year.
BIP-119: An open letter to BTC’s tech community
On June 9, a group of 66 Bitcoin application and protocol developers signed an open letter to the technical Bitcoin community urging adoption of BIP-119, as well as another proposal (CSFS, BIP-348). The signatories noted the “significant benefits that these changes would bring to end-users of bitcoin,” including boosts to Bitcoin layer-1 security and Bitcoin layer-2 scaling solutions.
Among the signatories were influential developers such as Jameson Lopp and Andrew Poelstra, as well as developers from Bitcoin-focused firms like Anchorage, Luxor Mining and Alpen Labs.
“Significant progress is being made towards such consensus,” Steven Roose, CEO of Second, told Cointelegraph this week while cautioning that activation isn’t yet a done deal.
Still, Roose said approval could happen by the end of the year
If so, would that be an important development for the Bitcoin community? Roose answered:
“Any Bitcoin upgrades, including BIP-119, are going to be significant because of how distributed the network’s consensus rules have become,” Daniel Gray, senior research analyst at Fidelity Digital Assets, told Cointelegraph
One of the most exciting aspects of BIP-119 is the introduction of covenants and, through that, vaults, continued Gray. Users today have many options when it comes to securing their Bitcoin (BTC), “but vaults add an additional level that could potentially bring more comfort to self-custody users, as well as more security options with other custody solutions.”
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According to the developers’ letter, the upgrade would allow better scaling solutions, vaults and congestion control, as well as enable discreet log contracts, where two or more parties agree to exchange money depending on the outcome of a certain event, which would offer more privacy for some Bitcoin transactions.
Galaxy Digital’s Alex Thorn wrote in a June 13 blog that BIP-119, were it activated, would “greatly enhance the ability to build better, safer methods of custody, create new forms of layer-2 bridges, and much more.” It could serve to integrate Bitcoin with platforms that execute smart contracts on the Ethereum blockchain, like Avalanche, Polygon, Arbitrum and others.
Why do soft forks take so long?
Bitcoin draws security from its decentralized structure, but it also makes important changes, sometimes called soft forks, very difficult. The network has no board of directors to ratify decisions. It operates in an open-source manner, and for that reason, a meaningful change often requires years of painstaking consensus-building.
This isn’t all bad. The cryptocurrency is designed to be a long-term store of value, and so it should be resistant to short-term pressures and incentives, continued Thorn, “but that doesn’t mean Bitcoin should never be upgraded.”
The last upgrade, Taproot, activated in November 2021, led to some unforeseen use cases (e.g., ordinals’ controversy), and that, too, could be making more developers hesitant this time around. According to Gray:
What are covenants?
It’s difficult to determine the unexpected secondary effects that an upgrade like BIP-119 could bring, but it could draw in new users and innovative businesses, according to Gray. The introduction of covenants and, through those, vaults, which are cold storage repositories for long-term BTC holdings, are particularly interesting
“Smart vaults” could allow a user to determine beforehand how much BTC could be moved within a given time frame and where it should be sent. For example, a user could determine that no more than 0.1 BTC can flow out of their vault and into their hot wallet per week, as explained in a recent blog.
This setup, where a user restricts where and to whom they can send some of their Bitcoin, is known as a covenant. As Gray wrote in a recent Fidelity Digital Assets research report, covenants could be useful for creating smart contracts “previously thought to be too complex and too risky to implement on Bitcoin’s Layer-1.”
BIP-119 author Rubin offers another example: A cold wallet could be set up “where one customer support desk can, without further authorization, move a portion of the funds (using multiple pre-set amounts) into a lukewarm wallet operated by an isolated support desk.”
The support desk could then issue some funds to a hot wallet and send the remainder back to cold storage with a similar withdrawal mechanism in place.
Bitcoin upgrades are difficult for several reasons, but an important one is that there is no established protocol for making major changes like the Segwit and Taproot upgrades. Rubin proposed a Speedy Trial consensus mechanism for BIP-119, where activation would require 90% Bitcoin miner approval.
But back in 2022, he encountered robust community criticism for ceding too much power to Bitcoin miners.
One alternative is a User Activated Soft Fork (UASF), which requires node approval. Nodes are the individual computers that run the Bitcoin protocol. There are tens of thousands of these. By comparison, only two BTC mining pools — Foundry USA and AntPool — control 47% of the total Bitcoin hashrate
Related: Bitcoin miners gambled on AI last year, and it paid off
Developer Luke Dashjr, for one, opined in 2023 that Bitcoin protocol improvement proposals should be activated using the more decentralized UASF process, which is more democratic and secure.
Take the Lightning Network, a payment scaling layer on the Bitcoin network that has experienced significant growth since its 2018 launch. Whereas ordinary layer-1 Bitcoin transactions might take an average of 10 minutes to settle, Lightning transactions occur at something approaching the speed of light — and at a negligible cost. “This combination enables bitcoin payments to be used for day-to-day purchases such as a cup of coffee,” Gray noted in a recent blog.
But this new type of digital commerce has to work virtually 100% of the time to be effective, and the technology isn’t quite there yet, Gray suggested. BIP-119 could help make it really scalable.
Bitcoin Virtual Machines can be used to build bridges between Bitcoin and non-Bitcoin crypto platforms. “I think it would be very hard to predict what direction the Bitcoin ecosystem would take if both were fully deployed on Bitcoin’s mainnet,” commented Roose.
The upgrade could boost Bitcoin adoption, though, Roose believes, opening the door to new protocols that would significantly improve the user experience. In addition, bridging Bitcoin with an Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM)-based system — platforms like Polygon, Avalanche, Arbitrum, etc. — “can bring in the big ecosystem of EVM-based builders and apps,” said Roose
BIP-119 could move ahead by year’s end
The developers’ June 9 letter to the technical community urged Bitcoin Core’s contributors to “prioritize” the review and integration of BIP-119 and BIP-348 over the next six months. The signatories insisted that they weren’t trying to dictate the consensus process.
Could something happen by year’s end with regard to BIP-119, then? “I think end of year would be a fair target to have formed consensus on what direction the technical community will want to take,” Roose answered. Even if consensus is reached, however, actual implementation could still take one to two years.
All in all, while reaching consensus in Bitcoin’s decentralized ecosystem is notoriously slow and complex, there is cautious optimism today that community agreement could be achieved for CTV/BIP-119 by the end of 2025, potentially paving the way for a transformative period in Bitcoin development.
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