A long-awaited technical fix is now a core part of Bitcoin's Lightning Network. Splicing, which lets users add or remove funds from a payment channel without closing it, is officially part of the Lightning specification after cross-implementation testing.
On Bitcoin Optech, Dusty Daemon explained the practical impact. Splicing collapses a user's dozens of small channels into one seamless balance, cutting on-chain fees by half. The Phoenix iPhone wallet already uses it. This solves the channel mess, a major friction point for mainstream adoption.
Dusty Daemon, Bitcoin Optech:
- Splicing at its core allows you to change the size of a Lightning channel.
- It is kind of like changing the size of the wings on a plane while it is flying.
The fee reduction and simpler user experience are accelerating new applications. On Plebchain Radio, Nat Cole argued for a "new music economy" built on Lightning. It revives the peer-to-peer spirit of Napster or BitTorrent but replaces clunky file-sharing with automated, sub-cent streaming payments to artists, bypassing closed platforms like Spotify.
Adoption is already happening in the background. As reported on Bitcoin And, Square has flipped a switch, making Bitcoin payments via Lightning the default setting for millions of US merchants. David Bennett noted the merchant never touches the Bitcoin; Square handles the conversion to dollars, shielding sellers from volatility and tax complexity.
David Bennett, Bitcoin And:
- I can walk up to a square merchant today and unless that square merchant has purposely gone through the settings and turned off all Bitcoin functionality, then I will have the option to pay that invoice in Bitcoin or lightning.
Splicing moves Lightning from a patchwork of technical workarounds toward a unified payment layer. The next wave of apps will rely on it to feel as frictionless as mainstream alternatives.


