Wed, 13 Mabitcoin

Bitcoin-Inhaber können jetzt mehr von ihren Aktivitäten verbergen, aber nur, indem sie neuen Mittelsmännern vertrauen

Burns Brief

Starknet startete strkBTC am 12. Mai und sperrte BTC auf der Basisschicht von Bitcoin, um einen ERC-20-Token zu unterstützen, der abgeschirmte Guthaben in großem Maßstab in eine Smart-Contract-Umgebung bringt. Die Marktstimmung dreht sich ins Positive, wobei Händler und Analysten auf eine mögliche Folgedynamik in den kommenden Sitzungen hinweisen. Achten Sie auf die Reaktion von $BTC – eine entscheidende Bewegung über oder unter wichtige Niveaus wird den nächsten Trend bestätigen.

Starknet launched strkBTC on May 12, locking BTC on Bitcoin's base layer to back an ERC-20 token that brings shielded balances into a smart contract environment at scale. The token runs in the public mode, where it behaves like any other wrapped Bitcoin asset, and shielded mode, where users can hide selected balances and transfers from outside observers. Starknet routes viewing keys to an independent third-party auditor, preserving selective disclosure when regulators or counterparties require it. A five-member federation handles BTC movement between Bitcoin and Starknet, with its roadmap pointing to greater trust minimization. Atomiq and Garden provide bridge routes from BTC and WBTC into the new token. Starknet published its privacy argument on Apr. 10 , framing on-chain visibility as incompatible with real financial use. By Apr. 20, v0.14.2 was live, with native in-protocol proof verification and the infrastructure layer for encrypted balances. On Apr. 28, Starknet confirmed that Atomiq and Garden would wire BTC and WBTC liquidity directly into strkBTC. On May 7, it disclosed the five-member federation, and seven days later, the product went live. That build sequence reflects that the most active Bitcoin privacy development is happening outside the Bitcoin protocol, in environments designed for rapid iteration. Starknet's strkBTC went from privacy thesis to live product in 32 days, crossing five development milestones between April 10 and May 12. Bitcoin built transparency into its ledger by design. Every transaction is verifiable, every address is traceable, and the complete payment history of any wallet is visible to anyone with a block explorer. For corporate treasury managers, large-value OTC desks, or any entity that prefers not to broadcast its full wallet balance to the market on every outbound payment, it creates a real operational problem. The market response has been to build privacy into adjacent systems that can move faster than Bitcoin's base layer.

Key Takeaways