Near Protocol will let users sign transactions on third-party chains from single wallet
Quick Take The new network is said to allow users access to any blockchain network with one account. Chain Signatures aims to defragment liquidity scattered across different blockchains.
Near Foundation has launched Chain Signatures, a protocol that will let users sign transactions on third-party blockchains from one single Near account. Chain Signatures is live on Near's testnet, and its mainnet launch expected by early May, according to a Near spokesperson.
Chain Signatures is powered by a decentralized multi-party computation (MPC) network and secured by Near network validators.
It enables Near accounts, including smart contracts, to sign transactions for any blockchain. Any Near account can control any number of addresses on all blockchains, enabling new use cases around decentralized finance. In future, it will receive additional security from EigenLayer as well, according to the foundation.
“Decentralized Finance (DeFi) on non-smart contract chains is now possible for the first time on many networks including Bitcoin,” Near Foundation stated. “Developers can easily build DeFi products that utilize assets from other chains without bridging these assets.”
Chain Signatures currently supports Ethereum, Cosmos chains, Dogecoin, Bitcoin and XRP Ledger, and will soon support Solana, TON Network, Polkadot, and others, according to Near.
It includes a "Multichain Gas Relayer," which removes the need to have the native gas token of another chain in order to transact; instead they can just use Near or NEP-141 tokens to cover gas on any chain.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Non-USD stablecoins may boost global e-commerce adoption
Stablecoin trading hits $1.8T in November
Vancouver mayor proposes adding Bitcoin to city reserves
Ex-Fortnite player linked to $3.5M memecoin scams