SegWit Now Comprises 50 Percent Of Bitcoin Transactions

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The proportion of Bitcoin payments sent using Segregated Witness (SegWit) experienced a sudden spike on October 4, rising to over 50 percent for the first time.


Corning The Network

Data from Transactionfee.info uploaded to social media shows SegWit transactions jumping from around 45 percent to 53 percent.

SegWit, a protocol which facilitates faster and cheaper Bitcoin transactions for end users among other benefits, has seen steady uptake throughout 2018. May was a particularly successful month for adoption, with SegWit’s share of transactions rising from 27 percent to near 40 percent.

More recently, major US cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase pledged support for Bech32 SegWit last week, while cryptocurrency hardware wallet KeepKey’s latest update also includes support for the protocol.

SegWit also partly enabled Bitcoin block 540107 to be the biggest ever mined late last month, coming in at 2.26 megabytes due to the technology enabling blocks over 2 megabytes in size.

Scaling Debate Continues

Bech32 is a new format of SegWit address specified in Bitcoin Improvement Protocol BIP 0173, and Coinbase’s decision has been welcomed by the technology’s proponents. Bech32’s improvements over ‘wrapping’ coins P2SH-format addresses has created a desire to speed uptake even further.

“The fact that Bech32 isn’t backwards compatible can actually be used as a tool to speed up adoption,” lobby resource When SegWit? By wallet provider BRD states.

“If we can rapidly establish Bech32 as the default address format, and discourage the use of P2SH addresses, we can create a temporary rift where senders are obliged to upgrade their software in order to serve receiving customers.”

Meanwhile, the debate around Bitcoin’s development continues to provoke mixed reactions.

On Twitter, investor Ari David Paul claimed that while there was “plenty of technical debate around SegWit and scaling… many people agree on the technical points and disagree on the best path forward.”

What do you think about SegWit’s progress? Let us know in the comments below! 


Images courtesy of Shutterstock.

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