Litecoin is often referred to as a mere copy of Bitcoin. That is rather unfair sentiment, primarily because there are plenty of developments taking place.
One of those ongoing developments is known as MimbleWimble.
While not unique to Litecoin, significant progress on implementing this solution has been made in recent months.
In the latest update, some more details have been released.
One drawback to MimbleWimble is how the recipient must be online when a transaction is sent.
This is required for communication over this protocol.
Developer David Burkett will submit a proposal in the coming weeks, and one that removes this need.
Additionally, this will eventually allow for hardware wallet support.
A recent audit for Grin++ – the base for Libmw – also provides valuable insights.
Based on the findings by security researchers, the “necessary fixes” have been applied to both Grin++ and libmw.
A new review by the auditors of these fixes will occur very soon.
Several lingering issues affecting the Grin++ network have also been resolved.
There were some minor discrepancies with syncing, among other things.
Those have now all been resolved, allowing Burkett to focus on actual development instead of bug fixing.
There is still a lot of work to be done, but the Litecoin ecosystem is one step closer to enabling privacy-oriented transactions.
Justin Sun, CEO of TRON DAO, has just made one of his biggest announcements of…
$BNB has broken through a historic milestone. The token surged past $1,000, setting a new…
Decentralized finance (DeFi) has continued to disrupt traditional financial systems, offering permissionless access to lending,…
Solana’s app economy posted another breakout month. Total application revenues surged to $193.5 million in…
Sharps Technology (NASDAQ: STSS) is making a major move in the Solana ecosystem. The company,…
LivLive is redefining augmented reality (AR) gaming by turning real-world actions into measurable value for…