Bitcoin Cash (BCH) Hard Forks into Two New Blockchains Following Disagreement on Miner Tax

Shine Li  Nov 16, 2020 15:24  UTC 07:24

2 Min Read

Bitcoin Cash (BCH), a hard fork from Bitcoin, has once again split and created two new blockchains after a disagreement between two BCH clients.

Bitcoin Cash ABC and Bitcoin Cash Node blockchains were created following the split, with Binance being the last one to mine a block on Bitcoin Cash blockchain, block #661647.  

The hard fork that happened on Bitcoin Cash was a result of a disagreement on a new software rule that some Bitcoin Cash miners, led by BCH head developer Amaury Séchet, wished to instate. The new policy would require 8% of mined BCH to be redistributed to Bitcoin Cash ABC (BCHA) as a way to finance the development of the protocol.

Another community dubbed Bitcoin Cash Node disagreed on the rule, and as there was a conflict of interest, Bitcoin Cash blockchain divided into two different networks as a result. One possessed the old blockchain system, the one that did not have an 8% miner tax imposed and another followed the new rule.

Bitcoin Cash Node (BCHN) has seen multiple mined blocks following the split, in contrast with Bitcoin Cash ABC. Hashpower has also indicated that miners have been in favor of Bitcoin Cash Node even before the fork, as 80% of miners were supportive of the network before the new blockchains formed.

As BCHN possesses more hashpower than Bitcoin Cash ABC, the latter may soon be obsolete, meaning Bitcoin Cash ABC blockchain may disappear completely with no miners backing it. Currently, BCHN blockchain is reported to be 71 blocks ahead of BCHA.

Following the blockchain fork announcement, Bitcoin Cash’s price suffered a correction, trading at $247.02 on CoinMarketCap.

Bitcoin Cash is a result of a fork from Bitcoin, which occurred in 2017. A group of Bitcoin developers wanted to increase Bitcoin’s block size limit and increase transaction speed, resulting in a split, or fork, from Bitcoin.


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