- “EIP 145 - more cost-effective and overall efficient approach to processing information (by adding bitwise shifting operators to the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM);
- EIP 1014: better approach to accommodating network scaling solutions such as off-chain transactions;
- EIP 1052 - an improvement on how contracts are processed;
- EIP1234 - 12-month delay of difficulty bomb; reduce mining rewards from 3 ETH to 2 ETH per block;
- EIP 1283 - a better way to monetize data storage changes (made by smart contract programmers)”
Ethereum Fork Scheduled to Happen Today
Ethereum (ETH), the world’s biggest altcoin and dapp platform, will undergo a hard fork upgrade (or backwards incompatible update) today on February 28th.
The two hard fork updates, Constantinople and St. Petersburg, will be activated today, meaning that Ethereum’s full-node validators will have to update their client software to the latest version. The set of upgrades will include important modifications to the Ethereum codebase, which will be implemented at block number 7,280,000.
In the upgrade process, St. Petersburg’s code is set to effectively disable certain parts of the Constantinople codebase. The Constantinople update was initially programmed to be released in mid-January 2019, but the date was postponed due to a critical vulnerability being discovered.
The vulnerability was found last month by cybersecurity firm ChainSecurity. The software bug which referenced certain smart contracts was detected just a few hours before the hard fork was scheduled to occur.
Lane Rettig, an independent blockchain developer, stated that implementation of the four out of five of the Ethereum improvement proposals (EIPs) will not make any noticeable changes to the end-user. The hard fork upgrades will activate the following EIPs: