What Is the Bitcoin eCash Hard Fork and How Does It Work?
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Q: What is eCash and who is behind it?
eCash is a planned Bitcoin hard fork scheduled to launch in August 2026, developed by Paul Sztorc, co-founder and CEO of LayerTwo Labs and a longtime Bitcoin developer. The fork's Layer 1 node is described as a near-copy of Bitcoin Core, using SHA-256d mining with a one-time difficulty reset. What makes eCash different from previous Bitcoin forks is its activation of Sztorc's BIP300 and BIP301 proposals via soft fork, which enable drivechain functionality. Seven drivechains are already in development including Truthcoin for prediction markets, CoinShift as a decentralized exchange, BitNames for identity, BitAssets for NFTs, and Photon for quantum resistance. Sztorc has framed eCash as a permanent infrastructure upgrade rather than a temporary fix like the 2017 Bitcoin Cash split, which focused narrowly on increasing block size.Q: What happens to existing Bitcoin holders when eCash launches?
Existing Bitcoin holders will automatically receive an equivalent amount of eCash tokens on the forked chain at the moment of the split. If you hold 4.19 BTC, you will receive 4.19 eCash. You can choose to sell your eCash, hold it, or ignore it entirely. Your BTC holdings are completely unaffected by the fork since eCash operates as a separate chain with its own token. The team will also release a coin-splitter tool to help users manage their split balances. Importantly, Sztorc has been explicit that moving BTC always requires Bitcoin software and a BTC private key, neither of which the eCash team has access to, meaning the fork cannot touch your actual Bitcoin in any way.Q: What is the controversy around Satoshi Nakamoto's coins?
The most contentious element of the eCash plan involves the approximately 1.1 million Bitcoin in the so-called patoshi pattern, widely attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto. On the eCash chain, Sztorc plans to manually reassign fewer than half of those eCash-equivalent coins to investors. He has clarified that this does not involve touching any actual BTC linked to Satoshi since those coins require Satoshi's private keys to move, and the eCash team has neither the software nor the keys to do so. Instead, 600,000 newly created eCash tokens would be allocated differently on the forked chain. The distinction is technically accurate but has still drawn significant backlash from parts of the community who view any interference with Satoshi-attributed holdings, even on a forked chain, as a problematic precedent. -
technically Sztorc doesn't have Satoshi's private keys. technically none of it touches real BTC. the community is not doing technical analysis on this one.