Home > Today’s Crypto News
bitcoin
bitcoin

$105376.947920 USD

3.29%

ethereum
ethereum

$3307.450676 USD

2.02%

xrp
xrp

$3.166034 USD

3.66%

tether
tether

$0.999996 USD

0.13%

solana
solana

$256.011142 USD

8.15%

bnb
bnb

$698.345581 USD

2.71%

dogecoin
dogecoin

$0.366785 USD

7.39%

usd-coin
usd-coin

$1.000137 USD

0.01%

cardano
cardano

$0.997491 USD

2.46%

tron
tron

$0.251575 USD

5.52%

chainlink
chainlink

$25.988166 USD

7.81%

avalanche
avalanche

$36.908167 USD

5.09%

sui
sui

$4.613995 USD

7.12%

stellar
stellar

$0.433275 USD

0.14%

toncoin
toncoin

$5.216493 USD

5.40%

Soft Fork (Blockchain)

What Is a Soft Fork (Blockchain)?

A soft fork refers to the changes applied to a blockchain for modifying or adding any functionality without causing any fundamental structural change. It ends further validity of older transactions or blocks for the network participants (nodes) who have decided to follow the new consensus rules. However, it still allows the nodes following the old consensus rules to consider newer transactions or blocks as valid. Therefore, a soft fork is backward-compatible, which is its differentiating characteristic from the more commonly known hard fork, which ends forward compatibility for all old consensus-following nodes. 

One salient part of cryptocurrency soft forks is that they don’t need all miners on the network to agree to run the new code, as it can be implemented with the majority of the miners agreeing on it. This allows network upgrades to be carried out faster and avoid causing a significant rift in the community. It can also be a result of a miner's mistakes if the old nodes violate new rules that they aren’t aware of. 

Bitcoin and Ethereum's blockchains have, over the years, enacted several soft forks in order to upgrade the network, fix issues or enhance functionality without taking the more contentious hard fork route of forcing all miners to agree on the new consensus rules, which would run the risk of splitting the network. A commonly known and typical example of a soft fork is the Bitcoin Segwit upgrade, which allows block capacity to increase by removing signature data from the transactions.