Bitcoin’s Lightning Torch Global Transaction Hits Iran After Censorship Concerns

iran LNtrustchain lightning torch

The Lightning Torch transaction relay using Bitcoin’ and the Lightning Network has crossed the border to Iran, days after complaints about censorship among participants.


Satoshis Over Censorship

Lightning Torch, which involves Bitcoin users passing around a transaction on the Lightning Network, adding funds and sending it forward, has gained significant interest since it began its journey in January.

The brainchild of the Twitter user known as hodlonaut, over 230 people have now held the ‘Torch,’ which emanates the Olympic Flame.

Despite being designed to prove the borderless, decentralized qualities of both Bitcoin and Lightning for payments, the project faced rare criticism last week after one participant refused to send the transaction to a recipient in Iran.

That recipient was Coinex executive Ziya Sadr, who appeared to gain community support after Peach Inc. senior software engineer Vijay Boyapati claimed political factors prevented him from involving him.

“Very sad that two peaceful people cannot transact with each other across the world because of the state,” Boyapati commented at the time.

UK Facilitates Hop To Iran

Since then, however, other Torch holders have broken ranks over the issue, and Ziya has now had the chance to receive the transaction.

According to the project’s monitoring website, it was UK-based Bitgeiniog who facilitated the move after receiving the payment from Bitcoin industry media resource Bitcoin Magazine. Ziya has since transferred it to another Iranian.

“[L]et’s keep the Censorship Resistance trend going,” he wrote, suggesting that developers of web browser Tor should be next in line to get involved.

Beyond the Torch, the Lightning Network continues to expand a-pace within Bitcoin. Statistics from monitoring resource 1ML.com confirm that overall capacity increased almost 20 percent in february, while the number of nodes and channels went up 19 and 39 percent respectively.

Lightning also goes far beyond payments. Last week, Bitcoinist reported on how Blockstream had used its Lightning testnet-powered Satellite setup to broadcast the world’s first ‘space meme.’

What do you think about Lightning Torch going to Iran? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Shutterstock

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