It is 2pm Universal Coordinated Time (utc)
 on August 18th and all over the world people are dialling in to a 
fortnightly “core developers” Zoom call, which is broadcast live on 
YouTube to anyone who wants to watch. None of the participants have 
their cameras on. Most appear as just black squares with names—including
 one labelled Vitalik, behind which lurks Vitalik Buterin, the inventor 
of Ethereum. 
A handful of users have 
adopted a panda avatar, with cartoon faces swaying and smiling in time 
to their human counterparts. That they picked the monochrome bear is 
thanks to Hsiao Wei Wang, an Ethereum researcher, who created a meme 
showing two bears, one black and one white, doing the “fusion dance” 
from Dragon Ball z, a popular anime show. In the show the
 dance fuses two creatures into a single, stronger one. The panda—a 
combination of the two bears—has since become a symbol for “the merge”.
The
 merge is the name the crypto-community has given to the point at which 
the Ethereum blockchain will transition from using “proof-of-work” as a 
consensus mechanism, the method by which all the computers maintaining a
 blockchain agree to add new transactions to it, to using 
“proof-of-stake”. They call it the merge because, for almost two years, a
 separate proof-of-stake blockchain, called the Beacon chain, has been 
whirring alongside the original Ethereum one for developers to test, 
improve and test again. The Zoom call is for the developers to agree on 
when the two chains will join together. The date and time of the event 
will depend on how much computer power is being used to maintain the 
blockchain, but should happen at around 1am utc on September 15th.
This
 is no mere technical tweak. It is a complete overhaul of a $200bn piece
 of software that has been running for seven years, which will, if all 
goes to plan, be implemented with no downtime. People in crypto like to 
compare the process to changing the engine of an aeroplane mid-flight. 
Proof-of-work is hugely energy intensive, requiring vast amounts of 
computing power, and has resulted in blockchains, like Ethereum and 
Bitcoin, consuming as much energy as small countries. Proof-of-stake 
will require 99.9% less energy to maintain. The effect on emissions will
 be as though, overnight, the Netherlands had been switched off (see 
chart). More important still, the merge will, if successful, suggest 
that Ethereum has the capacity for self-improvement, opening the door to
 more sweeping changes.
Crypto
 is in need of good news, for the past year has been a torrid one. A 
handful of dodgy deposit-taking ventures have gone bust, wiping out 
savings; a crypto hedge fund has blown up; a stablecoin was revealed to 
be anything but stable. The total market capitalisation of crypto has 
crashed to around $1trn, about $2trn lower than it was this time last 
year. Ethereum’s improvements would not unpick any of this destruction. 
But, by reducing its environmental impact and highlighting the potential
 for future improvements, it would suggest that crypto has a brighter 
future than many now appreciate.
The 
idea for the Ethereum blockchain was first published in 2014 by Mr 
Buterin. As with Bitcoin, it is a large database of all the transactions
 that have ever taken place in the cryptocurrency. But Mr Buterin’s 
crucial insight was that the blockchain could do much more than that—it 
could also keep track of lines of code. This allows Ethereum to record 
transfers of the currency, but also of all the assets and functions that
 are maintained in “smart-contracts”, self-executing agreements in which
 a chain of actions follows when certain conditions are met. That 
Ethereum validates code has made it possible for developers to build a 
large network of financial institutions, like exchanges and lenders, in 
code on the Ethereum blockchain...
more at The Economist
      
      
      
      
        © The Economist
     
      
      
      
      
      
      Key
      
 Hover over the blue highlighted
        text to view the acronym meaning
      

Hover
        over these icons for more information
      
      
     
    
    
      
      Comments:
      
      No Comments for this Article