Mastering the Lightning Network: A Second Layer Blockchain Protocol for Instant Bitcoin Payments

Mastering the Lightning Network: A Second Layer Blockchain Protocol for Instant Bitcoin Payments

  • Downloads:5676
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-12-12 08:51:00
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Andreas M. Antonopoulos
  • ISBN:1492054860
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

Launched in early 2018, the Lightning Network (LN) is rapidly growing in users and capacity。 This second-layer payment protocol works on top of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies to provide near-instantaneous transactions between two parties。 With this practical guide, authors Andreas M。 Antonopoulos, Olaoluwa Osuntokun, and Rene Pickhardt explain how this advancement will enable the next level of scale for Bitcoin, increasing speed and privacy while reducing fees。

Ideal for developers, systems architects, investors, and entrepreneurs looking to gain a better understanding of LN, this book demonstrates why experts consider LN a critical solution to Bitcoin's scalability problem。 You'll learn how LN has the potential to support far more transactions than today's financial networks, ushering in an era of global micro-transactions at sub-second resolution。

In several parts, this book examines:


The challenges of scaling blockchain technology and why the Lightning Network was invented
LN basics including wallets, nodes, and lightning payments
Lightning payment channels and how they work
Routing payments by constructing paths of payment channels from sender to recipient, including onion routing, and atomic multi-path payments
Lightning developments such as eltoo, Schnorr signatures, HODL invoices, JIT routing, channel splicing, and channel factories
Building applications on Lightning (Lapps)

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Reviews

Mircea

key takeaways: 1) to understand how lightning works you need to understand bitcoin first 2) lightning is orders of magnitude more complex 3) for a transaction to happen both nodes that are transacting need to be online 4) overall it looks very promising as it eliminates the transaction and block limits bitcoin has 5) it can also theoretically improve privacy。 Not sure that running a lightning node with the expectation of a profit is realistic。 Also, running a node is not a set it and forget it t key takeaways: 1) to understand how lightning works you need to understand bitcoin first 2) lightning is orders of magnitude more complex 3) for a transaction to happen both nodes that are transacting need to be online 4) overall it looks very promising as it eliminates the transaction and block limits bitcoin has 5) it can also theoretically improve privacy。 Not sure that running a lightning node with the expectation of a profit is realistic。 Also, running a node is not a set it and forget it type of situation (like it is for non-mining bitcoin nodes)。 。。。more