[ccpw id=”5575″]

    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Tuesday, June 24
    • Shop
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    KryptoCode
    • Top Stories
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Crypto News
    • Metaverse
    • DeFi
    • NFT
    • Altcoin
    • AI
    • Web3
    • More
      • Blockchain
      • Tether
      • Dogecoin
      • Solana
    • Live Rates
    • Shop
    KryptoCode
    Ethereum

    Ethereum gas fees soar again

    December 11, 2023Updated:December 11, 2023No Comments4 Mins Read

    Ethereum

    When it comes to market cap among cryptocurrencies, Ethereum trails only Bitcoin. Photo illustration by Jonathan Raa—NurPhoto via Getty Images

    In early December, the sudden popularity of a new species of NFT called Buterin Cards led Ethereum gas fees—the cost to carry out a transaction on the blockchain—to briefly soar to around $10. Even though the fees soon fell back to around $1, the episode was an unpleasant reminder of earlier crypto booms when Ethereum became practically unusable just as it was soaring in popularity. This famously occurred with the arrival of an early NFT package known as Crypto Kitties in 2017, and with the massive speculative frenzy of the 2021 crypto bubble.


    During those earlier episodes, Ethereum boosters begged for understanding since the blockchain, which was the first to popularize smart contracts, was still a new technology. The crypto world was largely understanding since growing pains for a project of this scale are inevitable, and due to the specific challenge of the “blockchain trilemma”—an axiom that says it is easy to build for two of the three qualities of speed, security, and decentralization but not all three. As we appear to be entering a new crypto bull market, though, it’s not clear if people will be as patient.

    The frustration around gas fees is partly a financial one—no one likes to pay more than they expect. But it’s also rooted in a philosophical disconnect: The promise of Ethereum is that it’s supposed to be a cheaper and safer technology than the conventional financial system. The reality for many people who first try Ethereum, however, is that the proposed gas cost exceeds the cost of the underlying transaction.

    I asked Paul Brody, an Ernst & Young executive who has written a well-reviewed book titled Ethereum for Business, to see if he is concerned that the blockchain’s ongoing gas headaches might mean it is running out of time to prove it is ready for primetime. He told me he is not, pointing to the flourishing layer-2 ecosystem, which lets users carry out the bulk of transactions on auxiliary blockchains like Optimism at a fraction of the cost. Those transactions are then bundled up and stamped on the main Ethereum blockchain, providing the same immutable record.

    Layer-2 technology has indeed grown by leaps and bounds since 2021, spurred in part by Ethereum’s successful switch to a proof-of-stake model for its blockchain, and costs on the side chains are far lower. But as I pointed to Brody, the experience of using a layer-2 chain is still clumsy and complicated, and off-putting to nontechnical people.

    Brody acknowledged that the L2 experience remains “absolutely horrible” but says this is only a temporary situation, and that it won’t be long until it becomes abstracted away with better designs. Meanwhile, he added that Ethereum remains the dominant smart contract for companies by an order of magnitude, and that this growth will only continue—a refutation of claims by Solana and other rivals that tout their lower gas costs as proof they can replace Ethereum.

    For now, Brody appears right that Ethereum remains in the pole position when it comes to being the world’s go-to smart contract platform. That said, if the next crypto boom is once again defined by eye-popping Ethereum fees, patience will begin to run out.

    Jeff John Roberts
    jeff.roberts@fortune.com
    @jeffjohnroberts

    DECENTRALIZED NEWS

    The SEC asked a Washington, D.C., court to incorporate admissions included in Binance‘s recent settlement with the DOJ, claiming they strengthen its ongoing case. (Bloomberg) 

    Pudgy Penguins, a rare recent NFT success story that includes the sale of stuffed characters in Walmart, announced it will soon launch an interactive digital world. (CoinDesk)

    In a possible sign of an effort to be more conciliatory with regulators, Tether says it is freezing the wallets of individuals sanctioned by U.S. financial crimes watchdog OFAC. (The Block)

    The departure of one-time fixtures of the crypto world like Sam Bankman-Fried and Changpeng Zhao has led some to see a “power vacuum at the top of the crypto industry.” (NYT)

    Bitcoin briefly fell 7% before clawing back some of those losses to sit around $42,000, a likely sign of traders taking profit in an overheated market. (Bloomberg)

    MEME O’ THE MOMENT

    Complaining about the price of gas:

     



    This news is republished from another source. You can check the original article here

    Previous ArticleMark Cuban Loves Cryptocurrency So Much That He Didn’t Abandon It After His Digital Wallet Was Robbed
    Next Article Major Events That Could Affect Price This Week

    Related Posts

    Crypto Whale Loses $4500,00 Million In Attempt To Leverage Long Ethereum Twice – FX Leaders

    April 17, 2024

    Ethereum To Plunge To $2,500 This Month? What’s Next For ETH And ENA?

    April 17, 2024

    Can Ethereum (ETH) Hit All-Time High After Bitcoin Halving?

    April 16, 2024

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    [ccpw id=”5575″]

    © 2025 AsymmetricalBet


    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.