Share this article

Network Bringing Bitcoin to DeFi Taps Libra Member Bison Trails for Staking Services

DeFi protocol Keep Network has tapped Bison Trails to provide non-custodial staking services for tBTC, an ERC-20 representation of bitcoin (BTC) deposits.

Updated Sep 14, 2021, 8:34 a.m. Published Apr 28, 2020, 7:00 p.m.
Archives and record keeping

Decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Keep Network has tapped Bison Trails to provide non-custodial staking services for tBTC, an ERC-20 representation of bitcoin deposits.

Keep, a project from blockchain venture studio Thesis, operates tBTC in a trustless manner by breaking bitcoin deposits across smart contracts held by various Keep users. Keep also chose staking providers Staked, Figment and Boar Network as partners for staking services.

“Infrastructure is important because if your node is being asked to sign a message or it’s holding onto BTC as one of the shards, you ideally don’t ever want to be offline,” Bison Trails protocol specialist Viktor Bunin told CoinDesk in an interview.

Bison Trails provides “blockchain-as-a-service” for multiple chains including the Libra Association and Polkadot. Now it's securing tokenized versions of bitcoin on Ethereum.

Read more: Why Bison Trails Is Staying the Course on Libra

Thesis launched its Keep protocol Monday with planned integration from 75% of the DeFi market, according to founder and CEO Matt Luongo. The startup raised $7.7 million earlier this month in a token agreement with Paradigm Capital, Fenbushi Capital, Collaborative Fund and others.

Stepping back, Keep allows users to deposit bitcoin on Keep, which can then be deployed onto DeFi protocols for uses such as lending at interest. This benefits users by allowing them to accrue interest; it benefits DeFi protocols by allowing them to lean on bitcoin’s liquidity. Most DeFi applications typically use ether (ETH) or the dai stablecoin as their asset of choice, though both have considerably smaller market caps than that of bitcoin.

Read more: Makers of Keep Protocol Raise $7.7M to Bring Trustless BTC to DeFi

The bitcoin deposits must be protected in order for users to lend, however. This is accomplished through a variety of methods including sharding bitcoin across wallets and putting ETH up as collateral in case a user misbehaves.

Additionally, users can withdraw their bitcoin holdings at any time. This feature reinforces the need for a non-custodial infrastructural provider such as Bison Trails, Luongo said.

If a node is offline or incommunicado, that bitcoin is at risk of being lost permanently, Bunin said.

Read more: These Bitcoin Users Want DAI and DeFi – Here’s How They Plan to Get It

As for tBTC, the rest of the network is slowly rolling out.

The first iteration of the network, v1, launched Monday. The system’s random beacon – which chooses how tBTC is trustlessly routed across the network, perhaps the core insight of the protocol – is set to be launched May 4, Luongo said.

Thesis has already signed over 40 partnerships to date and is working to bring tBTC onto preeminent DeFi platform MakerDAO. The network’s native token, KEEP, which users must stake in order to deposit or redeem tBTC, will be available commercially June 8, Luongo said.

Update (April 28, 19:45 UTC): A previous version of this article did not contain all of the staking providers chosen by Keep Network. The story has been updated with additional information.

More For You

Cypher Protocol suffers exploit (Clint Patterson/Unsplash)

An attacker drained 116,500 rsETH, roughly 18% of circulating supply, from Kelp's LayerZero-powered bridge on Saturday, triggering emergency freezes across Aave, SparkLend, Fluid and Upshift.

What to know:

  • An attacker exploited Kelp DAO's LayerZero-powered bridge to drain 116,500 rsETH—about $292 million and roughly 18 percent of the token's circulating supply—triggering an emergency pause of core contracts.
  • Because the bridge held reserves backing rsETH on more than 20 networks, the loss has raised doubts about the backing of rsETH...