Liquidity Management in the Lightning Network
Lightning Network liquidity is not a static resource to be deployed, but a dynamic flow to be managed. For node operators, merchants, and routing participants, the […]
Editorial Journal
Essays, research notes, and editorial analysis from the BitTalk team. Long-form, sourced, unsponsored.
Lightning Network liquidity is not a static resource to be deployed, but a dynamic flow to be managed. For node operators, merchants, and routing participants, the […]
Bitcoin offers more than an investment thesis. It offers a path toward monetary self-determination, ownership, and savings independence in a century where Africa's economic importance will keep rising.
Bitcoin matters not only because it can hold value, but because it is an open monetary network, a global settlement rail, and a savings technology built for the digital age.
Bitcoin does not guarantee peace, but by limiting the state's ability to hide the cost of conflict through monetary expansion, it raises the political price of war and restores financial reality.
Bitcoin has survived bans, crashes, attacks, ridicule, and repeated predictions of its death. More importantly, those pressures have often strengthened the network and clarified why it matters.
Bitcoin matters because its decentralization is not a slogan or interface choice. It is a hard constraint on who can control money, change the rules, or dilute everyone else.
Can Bitcoin fix money, or is that too big a promise? This article explores sound money, central banking, scarcity, and the deeper reasons people argue so passionately about Bitcoin.