Latest news about Bitcoin and all cryptocurrencies. Your daily crypto news habit.
Back in August of 2016, a paper named after the Harry Potter movie series called âMimblewimbleâ was proposed to the bitcoin community. The concept aims to offer ânear completeâ bitcoin transaction anonymity and the project has intrigued many cryptocurrency enthusiasts for quite some time. The development team behind the project has announced that an early version of the Mimblewimble platform is now being tested on the Bitcoin testnet.
Also read:Â Bitcoin.com Wallet Celebrates 500,000 Downloads in Three Months
Bitcoin Testnet Developers Deploy The Privacy Focused MimblewimbleÂ
One of the holy grails for many bitcoiners is transacting with the decentralized currency in a completely private manner. There are many projects being built on the Bitcoin network, and within the altcoin space that attempt to provide stronger anonymity such as Tumblebit, and other methods of privacy. Last year a developer who uses the pseudonym, âTom Elvis Jedusor,â introduced the Mimblewimble paper which supports the concepts of both Coinjoin and Confidential Transactions.
Essentially the protocol adds a cryptographic âblinding factorâ to a bitcoin transactionâs input and output values which obfuscates the transactionâs destination and the sum of funds sent. Now the development team has announced that Mimblewimble is being trialed on the Bitcoin testnet and developers can build their own nodes which connect to whatâs called the âGrin network.â
Developers Are Building Nodes on the Grin Network While Searching for Bugs and Suggesting Enhancements
One of the project developers, âWindsok,â details on Github that itâs too early to claim which operating systems (OS) support the node build. Most of the testing is happening on Linux, and while Mac OS is known to work there are some âslight hiccups.â As far as Windows the project can compile, but support is not yet known and the development team is not focused on this OS at the moment. Build prerequisites include a Github repo, cmake 3.2 or greater, and the Rust programming software. After all the prerequisites are met, the Mimblewimble repo gives a developer a step-by-step walkthrough on how to create the protocol.
At the moment the project is being used with testnet coins and the development team is hoping programmers can sort out the early bugs. According to the Github issues page, the Mimblewimble testnet has been quite active since the announcement, and individuals are finding bugs while also suggesting enhancements. Â
Overcoming Mimblewimbleâs Disadvantages
Mimblewimbleâs developers say the technology not only adds privacy, but could help with blockchain scaling as well. Although, thereâs also talk about a significant disadvantage to Mimblewimble, because it removes scripts from transactions. Bitcoin transactions contain scripts (a simple programming language) embedded into inputs and outputs that are assessed when a transaction is confirmed, and these scripts must be verified as true. Developers are trying to figure out a way to bypass the removal of transaction scripts, or figure out if script support is possible; which is probably why the testing is using the Grin network. In the future after further development, Mimblewimble will likely operate as a sidechain, which is a separate network that will be tethered to the bitcoin blockchain for cross-platform compatibility. Â Â Â Â Â Â
What do you think about Mimblewimble being tested? Do you look forward to privacy-centric protocols tethered to the Bitcoin network? Let us know in the comments below.
Images via Pixabay, the Harry Potter movie, and Paxful.Â
Need to calculate your bitcoin holdings? Check our tools section.
The post Privacy-Centric Protocol Mimblewimble Now Being Trialed on the Bitcoin Testnet appeared first on Bitcoin News.
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.