Draft:DLC.Link
Submission rejected on 29 March 2024 by Theroadislong (talk). This submission is contrary to the purpose of Wikipedia. Rejected by Theroadislong 7 months ago. Last edited by Citation bot 2 months ago. |
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- Comment: Most of the article is not about DLC.Link and appears to talk about the history of Bitcoin, which should at best be given a sentence to summarize the context needed to understand what DLC.Link does. Also, while not by itself a reason for decline, the citation format is completely non-standard and should be fixed. Chaotıċ Enby (talk · contribs) 23:27, 8 March 2024 (UTC)
DLC.Link Inc. is a US-based blockchain company on a mission to make Bitcoin composable. It’s building an infrastructure that provides developers with a secure and decentralized way to create smart contracts on the Bitcoin protocol.[1] The company was founded in 2021 by Aki Balogh, the CEO and co-founder of MarketMuse, and Jesse Eisenberg, a former software engineer at Pivotal Labs, MoPub, and Twitter.[citation needed] DLC.Link is based in North Andover, Massachusetts.[citation needed]
DLC.Link has two business lines: commercial and community. The commercial line aims to bring BTC to other chains via dlcBTC safely.[2] The company’s commercial strategy involves generating yield through participation in liquidity pools, such as Curve, where trading fees contribute to returns.[3] Besides, DLC.Link aims to generate yield by providing dlcBTC as collateral in lending pools, as demonstrated by platforms like AAVE.[4][5]
On the community front, DLC.Link seeks to enable protocols and chains to integrate its infrastructure, allowing them to create their own Discreet Log Contract (DLC) experiences.[6] Basically, a DLC is a special multisig unspent transaction output (UTXO) where users retain one key during a transaction. DLC experiences extend to supporting activities like Ordinals trading, exemplifying the company’s commitment to fostering diverse and customizable decentralized finance (DeFi) activities on the Bitcoin network.[7][8][9]
Moving Bitcoin (BTC) With Code – Not Trust
[edit]Though BTC is the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, it can’t be used in DeFi directly. To use it on other networks, users rely on custodian banks and crypto bridges to mint synthetic assets, such as wrapped Bitcoin (wBTC).[10]
Wrapped tokens lock BTC deposits with custodians or use smart contracts to mint synthetic versions on other networks. However, custodial wrapping and bridging of BTC often compromise the user’s self-sovereignty, privacy, and security – fundamental ideologies that form Bitcoin ethos.[11] Moreover, crypto bridge hacks resulted in losses exceeding $1 billion in little over a year.[12]
DLC.Link implements DLCs to enable BTC holders to use native BTC in DeFi without exposing themselves to custodial and bridging risks.[13] The platform trustlessly locks BTC on-chain, from where it can be used on other chains, like Ethereum.
dlcBTC
[edit]Recently, DLC.Link announced its first commercial product, dlcBTC, an innovative solution that securely moves native BTC with code to other chains.[14] The product will go live in early 2024 and help BTC holders seamlessly interact with popular DeFi applications, like Curve and AAVE, without needing custodians and intermediaries. DLC.Link’s infrastructure enables users to safely lock their BTC deposits in a DLC lockbox and mint dlcBTC out of self-custody.This innovative model safeguards BTC deposits using the full Bitcoin hashrate.[15]
Moreover, the payout addresses are predetermined and locked at the deposit stage. This implies that in the event of a security breach, the attackers cannot redirect or drain the deposits, making dlcBTC a “theft-proof” Bitcoin scalability solution.[16]
A Standard dlcBTC Mint/Redeem Process
[edit]Step 1: Pre-funding Transaction
[edit]A user begins the minting/redeeming process by generating a pre-funding transaction. This is a time-locked and on-chain transaction that secures the user's BTC collateral using the full hashrate of the Bitcoin network. The integration with the broader Bitcoin network ensures that dlcBTC inherits the robustness and protection of the largest and most secure blockchain in the world.[17]
Step 2: Transaction Creation for Attestors
[edit]Next, DLC attestors (similar to validators on traditional cross-chain bridges) create two partially signed Bitcoin transactions (PSBTs).[18] The first is the funding transaction, which uses the UTXOs from the pre-funding transaction to lock the BTC collateral. The second transaction is the payout transaction, designed to make the dlcBTC minting/redeeming process theft-proof.
Step 3: Attestor Relays
[edit]The attestors play a crucial role in the dlcBTC architecture - they are relays between the Bitcoin and other networks. They play a pivotal role in ensuring the integrity of transactions by publishing their DLC “Announcements” and identifying which UTXO is a DLC. This action adds an extra layer of transparency and trust to the system, ensuring that all parties involved can verify the legitimacy of the transactions.
Step 4: ERC20 Token Preparation
[edit]After confirming that the user has locked BTC in the DLC lockbox, the attestor’s smart contracts interact with the other network’s smart contracts on-chain. During the interaction, the attestors perform a series of checks and commands in the other blockchain, effectively setting up the system to mint ERC20 dlcBTC tokens.[19] The attestors' actions here are the bridge between the Bitcoin and other blockchains, enabling the locked BTC to be minted as ERC20 tokens, which are compatible with DeFi applications.
Step 5: ERC20 Claim Process
[edit]Once the dlcBTC tokens are minted, the user initiates the claim process. The process is a critical security step where the user must reveal the secret key they used to lock the collateral. The secret key is a unique identifier that acts as proof of ownership and authorization.[20] By revealing this key to the attestors, the user engages in what's known as an atomic swap, a kind of digital handshake that ensures a secure token exchange.
Step 6: Transaction Conversion
[edit]The attestors, upon receiving the correct secret key, authorize the transfer of the newly minted ERC20 tokens to the user's wallet. They achieve this by converting the pre-funding transaction which until now has been like a check waiting to be cashed) into a standard funding transaction. This conversion process is meticulous and secure, ensuring that the original terms of the deal are met and that the locked BTC is ready to be returned to the user's control in the form of dlcBTC tokens.
Step 7: Token Redemption and BTC Release
[edit]After the user achieves their intended action with dlcBTC tokens, they can convert them back to BTC by burning them.[21][22] The attestors observe the burn event on-chain and publish their DLC attestations. Once a threshold of attestations are published, the DLC unlocks. This mechanism ensures a consensus-based validation, adding another layer of security and trust to the redemption process.
Step 8: The Execution Phase
[edit]At this point, the user, utilizing their wallet software, initiates the final step. This action commands the transfer of BTC from the DLC lockbox to the user's wallet, completing the cycle of minting and redeeming within the dlcBTC architecture.
dlcBTC Primary Features that Distinguish It from Other Wrapped BTC Versions
[edit]These are the key dlcBTC features that distinguish it from other wrapped BTC forms, such wBTC in a table format:
dlcBTC | wBTC | |
---|---|---|
Difference in Minting technique | Minted out of self-custody | Minted by a custodian (BitGo) |
Automation | The minting and burning processes are fully automated, making dlcBTC more efficient. | The minting and burning processes are partially automated, making wBTC less efficient. |
Collateral management | Distributed across multiple accounts. | Held solely by BitGo |
Bitcoin base-level security | Secured by the full hashrate of the Bitcoin network. | Not secured by the full hashrate of the Bitcoin network. |
User sovereignty | Exercises user sovereignty by letting depositors to lock BTC on-chain. | Violates user sovereignty by requiring depositors to send collateral to off-chain addresses. |
Fees | The management of BTC reserves by smart contracts eliminates custodial overhead costs. | The management of BTC reserves by BitGo introduces additional fees, such as vault fees. |
Theft Protection | The DLC lockbox leverages a pre-signature mechanism that only pays out to the depositor address at all times. | Bad actors could redirect the collateral to their addresses once they gain access. |
Funding
[edit]In March 14, 2024 - OKX Ventures, the investment arm of OKX, one of the leading cryptocurrency exchanges, announced its strategic investment in DLC.Link.[23][24] Foresight Ventures, Animoca Ventures, Cryptogram Ventures, Hailstone Labs, Lotus Capital, Web3.com Ventures, Michael Jin, Allan Matheson and Dae Lee also participated in this investment round.
In October, 2022, DLC.Link announced it had completed a $2 million pre-seed investment round.[25] The investment round was headed by ABCDE Capital, established by a Huobi co-founder, and Comma 3 Ventures.[26] DeFi funds Bixin, Contribution Capital, AlphaDAO, and DeSpread were the other investors.[27] Bitcoin mining-focused firms like New Layer Capital, SBX, Gossamer, and Waterdrip also participated in the funding.[28]
DLC.Link received strategic contributions from Chainlink, Stacks Foundation and Trust Machines. Chainlink was DLC.Link’s first investors through their foundation’s grant program.[29] Stacks Foundation then awarded DLC.Link their maiden Partner-level grant.[30]
Angel investors, including Charlie Songhurst (a Bitcoin whale and super-angel), Matt Barby (DeFi expert and podcaster), Saeed Al-Zaabi (formerly Director at the General Secretariat of Abu Dhabi) and Kieran Flanagan (CMO of Zapier) also participated the funding round through Sequoia Scout.
- ^ Kharif, Olga; Leising, Matthew (6 January 2015). "Bitcoin and Blockchain". Bloomberg. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "Aki Balogh: DLC Link – Self-Wrapped Bitcoin (dlcBTC)". Epicenter Episodes. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Weisenthal, Joe; Alloway, Tracy (21 May 2021). "Transcript: Aaron Lammer on Yield Farming, DeFi, and Ethereum". Bloomberg. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Wade, Jacob (28 February 2023). "What Is Aave?". Investopedia. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Sun, Zhiyuan (1 September 2021). "Here's How Aave Is Revolutionizing Traditional Finance". The Motley Fool. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Dryja, Thaddeus (12 October 2017). "Discreet Log Contracts" (PDF). MIT Digital Currency Initiative. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Ehrlich, Steven (10 March 2023). "What Is DeFi?". Forbes. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Shimron, Leeor (16 May 2020). "Bitcoin Is Invading Decentralized Finance On The Ethereum Network". Forbes. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "The Future of Ordinals and DLCs: A Q&A with DLC.Link". Trust Machines. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Marquit, Miranda (3 April 2023). "Wrapped Bitcoin vs. Bitcoin: How They're Different and Why It Matters". Finance Buzz. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Feuer, Alan (14 December 2013). "The Bitcoin Idealogy". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Kharif, Olga (31 March 2022). "Crypto-Bridge Hacks Reach Over $1 Billion in Little Over a Year". Bloomberg. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Glasbergen, Gert-Jaap (30 June 2018). "Discreet Log Contracts: The Invincible Smart Contracts on the Bitcoin Blockchain". Medium. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "Aki Balogh: DLC Link – Self-Wrapped Bitcoin (dlcBTC). Ep. 526". Epicenter Podcast. 16 December 2023. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "The Smartest Way to Move Native Bitcoin". SmartCom 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "DLC.Link has launched dlcBTC, a Bitcoin cross-chain solution for DeFi operations". BlockBeats. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Pinkerton, Julie (21 March 2024). "The History of Bitcoin, the First Cryptocurrency". US.News. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "What Are Partially Signed Bitcoin Transactions (PSBTs)?". River Learn. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ McGimpsey, Patrick; Broverman, Aaron (28 June 2023). "Different Types Of Cryptocurrencies Explained". Forbes. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Gomi, Kazuhiro (12 March 2024). "Privacy Enhanced: Cryptography's Latest Frontiers". Forbes. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Daly, Lyle (9 February 2024). "What Is Cryptocurrency Coin Burning?". The Motley Fool. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "Token Burn". Finance Magnates. 15 June 2021. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "OKX Ventures Announces Investment in DLC.Link, the First Native Bitcoin DeFi Protocol". OKX Ventures. 14 March 2024. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "We've Invested in DLC.Link, the First Native Bitcoin DeFi Protocol". OKX. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "DLC.Link Completes $2Mn Pre-Seed Investment Round". DLC.Link Media. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "ABCDE : Why We Invest in DLC.Link?". ABCDE. 27 November 2023. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "Bixin Ventures' Pre-seed Investment in DLC.Link for Enhanced Bitcoin Ecosystem Integration". Bixin Ventures. 5 February 2024. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "New Layer Capital invests in DLC Link's $1M Pre-Seed Round". New Layer Capital. August 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ "DLC.Link Receives Chainlink Community Grant to Bridge Chainlink Oracle Data to Discreet Log Contracts (DLCs) On the Bitcoin Network". Chainlink. 24 December 2021. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Topalian, Claire (1 August 2022). "Builder Spotlight: DLC.Link". Stacks Foundation. Retrieved 29 March 2024.