San Francisco-based Lightning Labs, focused on a layered
scaling solution for bitcoin, released its first mobile app on
Wednesday.
According to Lightning Labs application developer Tankred Hase,
roughly 2,000 users downloaded the app across both iOS and Android. Both
his inbox and the inbox of his colleague, developer Valentine Wallace,
were flooded with support requests.
“We got a ton of feedback,” Wallace told CoinDesk.
This bitcoin wallet is a noncustodial way – meaning users hold the
keys to their assets – to send nearly instant payments worth less than
roughly $1,500. The startup put a cap on transaction amounts (one-sixth
of a bitcoin) while working out the kinks.
For now, the app’s Autopilot setting relies on the startup’s in-house
cluster with three full nodes and is mostly useful for sending bitcoin.
Users can only receive as much money as they’ve sent with the app.
However, more tech-savvy users are able to use a manual function for
setting up their own payment channels and connecting to their own nodes.
Hase said, there are plans to reduce reliance on Lightning Labs as
soon as Bitcoin Core updates to the Neutrino protocol, which allows the
app to tap into an external node that would otherwise be too “heavy” for
a mobile device.
The next step on the developers’ roadmap is enabling users to easily receive payments with a process called Lightning Loops.
New revenue goals
This app launch also kicked off the startup’s first monetization strategy.
Looking forward, Hase said, Lightning Labs will offer a monetized
service for merchants and other power-users that frequently receive
funds.
“It’s non-custodial, we don’t hold their funds, but it is a paid
service because it requires us to use funds for liquidity and to allow
that on the backend,” he said. “I like the Amazon Web Services analogy
because it allows the other startups to focus on their business logic
while Amazon takes on the infrastructure.”
Stepping back, the Lightning Labs team is also working closely with Jack Dorsey’s fintech startup Square. Dorsey, who is an investor in Lighting Labs, said in February
that lightning-enabled features were eventually coming to Cash App.
Yet, as Wallace pointed out, this app services a distinct function
compared to Dorsey’s app.
“It makes a lot of sense for our values as a company to have a wallet
that’s totally under our control,” she said, adding the Cash App
bitcoin feature is primarily a custodial conduit for purchasing bitcoin.
Speaking broadly to how this new app, which admittedly has a long way
to go until it can easily send and receive diverse bitcoin transaction
types, plays into the startup’s long-term plan, Hase said:
“Our strategy is to become an infrastructure provider that other apps and merchants can integrate.”
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