Charlie Lee announces move to improve Litecoin's privacy

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Charlie Lee, creator of Litecoin, announced in a tweet earlier this morning the intention to pursue confidential transactions in a future release of the implementation sometime in 2019. Plans are for the release to be implemented via a soft-fork, and will initially offer users optionality in shielding transaction amounts, a move to reach easier consensus on the change, according to Lee's Twitter thread.

Confidential transactions is a form of privacy that obfuscates transaction amounts over the network, rather than the addresses the coins are being sent to. The move comes at a time when many in the Bitcoin community are exploring ways to improve its privacy feature set, and could reopen dialogue of litecoin's ability to provide a "testing ground" for Bitcoin at large — in this case a stress test on the benefits and trade-offs of implementing confidential transactions.

AUTHOR

Ryan Todd is a research analyst at The Block where he focuses on the convergence of fintech and digital assets. Previously he worked at Deutsche Bank as an equity analyst covering consumer finance and payments companies, and also spent time at ConsenSys exploring the broader Ethereum ecosystem. Ryan holds a BS in Economics and Accounting/Finance from Florida State University, and MS Finance from Vanderbilt University.

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