Bitcoin Miners Breathe a Sigh of Relief as Difficulty Drops 1.45% After Five Consecutive Increases
Bitcoin’s network has been putting miners through the wringer lately, with five straight difficulty increases that had them on edge. However, on May 4, 2023, at block height 788,256, the network difficulty level took a d...
Bitcoin’s network has been putting miners through the wringer lately, with five straight difficulty increases that had them on edge. However, on May 4, 2023, at block height 788,256, the network difficulty level took a dip, dropping by 1.45% and bringing the overall difficulty down to 48.01 trillion for the next two weeks.
Bitcoin Difficulty Takes a Dip After Five Straight IncreasesBitcoin’s difficulty level finally dropped on May 4, 2023, after increasing five times since the February 24 increase of 9.95%. The five difficulty increases combined equated to a 22.62% increase, and the latest drop brings it down 1.45% lower. The change occurred at Bitcoin block height 788,256. At the time of writing, the network’s hashrate is 355.90 exahash per second (EH/s).
Just two days ago, the Bitcoin network hit a major milestone as its hashrate soared to an all-time high of 491 EH/s at block height 787,895. But with the next difficulty adjustment just around the corner on May 18, 2023, and less than 2,000 blocks away, miners are bracing themselves for what’s to come. While the recent downward difficulty drop has given them some much-needed relief, current block times are still hovering above the ten-minute average. In fact, the last block interval was a lengthy ten minutes and 49 seconds.
In addition, the Bitcoin network is currently grappling with a mempool with over 200,000 unconfirmed transactions waiting to be processed by miners. To expedite the process, users are shelling out a high-priority fee of $5.05 per transaction, while a medium-priority transfer will set them back $4.61. As for the top mining pools on May 4, Foundry USA takes the cake with 96.62 EH/s of hashpower, accounting for 27.17% of Bitcoin’s total hashrate. Trailing behind are Antpool (80.38 EH/s), F2pool (48.72 EH/s), Binance Pool (38.16 EH/s), and Viabtc (27.61 EH/s).
What do you think the future holds for Bitcoin’s difficulty level? Will it continue to rise steadily, or can we expect more dips in the coming months? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.
Original source
Read on Bitcoin NewsRelated market context
Bitcoin faces one of its biggest mining difficulty drops as miner margins collapse
The Bitcoin network is poised to execute one of the largest downward adjustments to its mining difficulty in its 17-year history t...
Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Set for Steep Drop as Hashrate Slides After Price Crash
Bitcoin’s mining difficulty is on track for the second-largest downward adjustment this year, offering a reprieve to miners after...
MetaMask reports connectivity disruption across multiple blockchain networks
The disruption highlights the vulnerability of decentralized finance ecosystems to single points of failure, impacting user trust...
Bitcoin price faces new risk as big buyers lose conviction
Bitcoin’s largest buyers are no longer behaving like a reliable backstop for the largest cryptocurrency. The exchange-traded funds...
Fireblocks Says Institutional ETH Staking Is Moving Toward Standardized Rails
TL;DR Fireblocks says it has launched ETH Staking Link, a standardized interface for institutional Ethereum staking integrations....
SEC targets 20-year-old rule standing between Wall Street and blockchain trading
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is moving to dismantle a stock-trading rule that has governed Wall Street for two dec...