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SoK: Bitcoin Layer Two (L2)

Minfeng Qi, Qin Wang, Zhipeng Wang, Manvir Schneider, Tianqing Zhu, Shiping Chen, William Knottenbelt, Thomas Hardjono

TL;DR

The first Systematization of Knowledge on constructing Layer Two (L2) solutions for Bitcoin is presented, and it is found that the inscription-based approaches introduce new functionality to Bitcoin systems, whereas existing proof-based solutions primarily address scalability challenges.

Abstract

We present the first Systematization of Knowledge (SoK) on constructing Layer Two (L2) solutions for Bitcoin. We carefully examine a representative subset of ongoing Bitcoin L2 solutions (40 out of 335 extensively investigated cases) and provide a concise yet impactful identification of six classic design patterns through two approaches (i.e., modifying transactions \& creating proofs). Notably, we are the first to incorporate the inscription technology (emerged in mid-2023), along with a series of related innovations. We further establish a reference framework that serves as a baseline criterion ideally suited for evaluating the security aspects of Bitcoin L2 solutions, and which can also be extended to broader L2 applications. We apply this framework to evaluate each of the projects we investigated. We find that the inscription-based approaches introduce new functionality (i.e., programability) to Bitcoin systems, whereas existing proof-based solutions primarily address scalability challenges. Our security analysis reveals new attack vectors targeting data/state (availability, verification), assets (withdrawal, recovery), and users (disputes, censorship).

SoK: Bitcoin Layer Two (L2)

TL;DR

The first Systematization of Knowledge on constructing Layer Two (L2) solutions for Bitcoin is presented, and it is found that the inscription-based approaches introduce new functionality to Bitcoin systems, whereas existing proof-based solutions primarily address scalability challenges.

Abstract

We present the first Systematization of Knowledge (SoK) on constructing Layer Two (L2) solutions for Bitcoin. We carefully examine a representative subset of ongoing Bitcoin L2 solutions (40 out of 335 extensively investigated cases) and provide a concise yet impactful identification of six classic design patterns through two approaches (i.e., modifying transactions \& creating proofs). Notably, we are the first to incorporate the inscription technology (emerged in mid-2023), along with a series of related innovations. We further establish a reference framework that serves as a baseline criterion ideally suited for evaluating the security aspects of Bitcoin L2 solutions, and which can also be extended to broader L2 applications. We apply this framework to evaluate each of the projects we investigated. We find that the inscription-based approaches introduce new functionality (i.e., programability) to Bitcoin systems, whereas existing proof-based solutions primarily address scalability challenges. Our security analysis reveals new attack vectors targeting data/state (availability, verification), assets (withdrawal, recovery), and users (disputes, censorship).
Paper Structure (31 sections, 4 figures, 3 tables)

This paper contains 31 sections, 4 figures, 3 tables.

Figures (4)

  • Figure 2: Bitcoin UTXO Model
  • Figure 3: Project statistical distribution
  • Figure 4: Binary Circuit Commitment in BitVM
  • Figure 5: State channel