Pact to speed up bitcoin drives currency to record
Bitcoin’s seemingly unstoppable rally has just been given new impetus.
The cryptocurrency extended its surge by 10 percent to a record high $2,690 on Thursday, bringing gains this year to 182 percent, after an agreement this week to upgrade the speed of processing transactions.
Before the pact, the digital currency faced a swelling backlog of transactions due to a cap on the amount of data the bitcoin blockchain can process. Disagreements over the right solution had fueled fears the digital asset would be split into two.
This week, Barry Silbert, founder of Digital Currency Group, posted a pact signed by more than 50 companies on increasing the block size and activating Segregated Witness, a new way of verifying transactions.
“It’s pretty significant to put this forward, have a consensus and move forward with a solution,” said Ryan Rabaglia, head trader at Octagon Strategy, a digital-currency firm in Hong Kong. “It’s always been on the back burner as something that can potentially disrupt bitcoin’s growth.”
While the signatories represent 83 percent of bitcoin hashing power, many similar agreements have fallen through in the past, including one that was supposed to be activated in July this year. SegWit, which was released last year, has also drawn ire from some corners of the bitcoin community.
“The whole industry is a bit immature in ways,” Rabaglia said.