Bitcoin saw its biggest negative difficulty adjustment in almost ten years on Nov. 3 as the network flawlessly takes care of itself.
Data from monitoring resource BTC.com showed that Bitcoin difficulty automatically readjusted by 16% Tuesday.
Estimates had previously suggested that the adjustment would be around 13%, but in the event, it was the second highest in Bitcoin's history.
Difficulty adjustments happen automatically every 2016 blocks, and allow Bitcoin to remain "Hard" money regardless of external factors impacting miners.
Such a reduction should incentivize more mining participants to compete for block subsidy rewards, with the result that difficulty then begins to rise again.
For users, the downward adjustment will reduce fees and decrease block times, along with reducing the size of unmined transactions in Bitcoin's mempool.
According to estimates from Earn.com, the optimal Bitcoin transaction fee remains high - 80,000 satoshis.
"There is no more beautiful aspect of #Bitcoin than the difficulty adjustment. Just flat out gorgeous mechanism design," Travis Kling, founder of asset manager Ikigai, summarized on Twitter.
Hash rate provides a look into how much computing power is being dedicated to Bitcoin transaction validation.
At publishing time, little impact was noticeable on Bitcoin price performance, with $13,000-$13,300 remaining as support and BTC/USD hovering at $13,500.
Bitcoin just had its biggest mining difficulty drop since 2011
Publicado en Nov 3, 2020
by Cointele | Publicado en Coinage
Coinage
Mencionado en este artÃculo
Noticias recientes
Ver todo
First Mover: What's Next for Bitcoin as Wall Street Gets Vaccine Booster
Bitcoin was higher for a second day, staying in a range of between roughly $15,200 and $15,600, as news of progress in developing a coronavirus vaccine appeared to touch off a rally in U.S. stocks.
Market Wrap: Bitcoin Fails to Break $15.9K; Over 50K ETH Staked on Eth 2.0 Contract
Bitcoin gained Wednesday while Ethereum 2.0 staking has been ramping up.
Citibank Analyst Says Bitcoin Could Pass $300K by December 2021
A senior analyst at U.S.-based financial giant Citibank has penned a report drawing on similarities between the 1970s gold market and bitcoin.
Blockchain Bites: Data Unions. Hard Forks. And One Citi Analyst's Case for $300K BTC.
A Citibank managing director thinks bitcoin could hit $318,000.