VerifiedX Launches Self-Custodial vBTC Sidechain to Enable Programmable Bitcoin

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Bitcoin breaking news: VerifiedX has launched a self-custodial vBTC sidechain to enable programmable Bitcoin without altering the core protocol. The project, a decentralized layer-1 and Bitcoin sidechain, aims to provide native programmable Bitcoin ownership while preserving custody and Bitcoin’s original ethos. VerifiedX uses threshold signatures and Taproot-based addresses to offer a self-custodial model, distinguishing itself from wrapped tokens like WBTC. The project also introduces optional privacy features using zero-knowledge proofs, aiming to balance confidentiality with regulatory compliance. Bitcoin news outlets are highlighting VerifiedX as a middle ground between Bitcoin maximalists and DeFi ecosystems, offering a 'reliever chain' that allows users to stay within the Bitcoin ecosystem while accessing DeFi functionalities.

Bitcoin, now trading around $78,165.23 and increasingly viewed as institutional crypto’s reserve asset, is prompting a new wave of infrastructure projects that ask a simple but crucial question: what should holders actually do with their BTC? VerifiedX believes the next chapter is making bitcoin programmable — without changing what made it valuable. The project, a decentralized layer-1 and Bitcoin sidechain, argues that utility should be built around bitcoin, not on top of it. “Bitcoin needs to be left alone,” Jay Pollak, head of strategy and business development at the VerifiedX Foundation, told CoinDesk. “People need to build around it and build utility with it.” A middle ground for Bitcoin and DeFi VerifiedX aims to sit between bitcoin maximalists — who view BTC as the only necessary crypto asset — and the sprawling DeFi ecosystems built on Ethereum and other chains. Its core pitch: enable native programmable bitcoin ownership while preserving custody and the network’s ethos. Instead of relying on wrapped tokens like WBTC, which place custody of the underlying BTC with a third party, VerifiedX uses a self-custodial architecture that combines threshold signatures with Taproot-based addresses to offer “native” programmable bitcoin. The team dubs the project both a sidechain and a “reliever chain,” a term it’s promoting to distinguish it from other Bitcoin scaling approaches. “We’re not reinventing or changing Bitcoin,” Pollak said. “You never leave the Bitcoin ecosystem.” Why this matters Bitcoin-based DeFi remains small relative to the asset’s market dominance. DeFiLlama puts total value locked in the Bitcoin ecosystem at just over $5 billion, versus more than $44 billion on Ethereum. Yet BTC still makes up roughly 60% of crypto market capitalization, per TradingView. For many institutional holders, current options are unattractive because they depend on bridges, custodians, or synthetic representations that dilute direct BTC exposure. “Institutions don’t want synthetic DeFi,” Pollak said. “They want real, native DeFi.” How VerifiedX works VerifiedX’s primary instrument is vBTC, a tokenized representation of bitcoin that the project says remains fully collateralized and redeemable without a federated custodian. The chain also includes optional privacy features using zero-knowledge proofs, while preserving auditability and compliance controls — aiming to thread the needle between confidentiality and regulatory needs. Privacy is back on the radar Privacy tools are enjoying renewed interest as institutions and traders confront the downsides of fully transparent blockchains. Projects like zcash have seen more attention as market participants seek ways to reduce on-chain visibility for strategic reasons — for example, to prevent wallets from being tracked or trades from being front-run. “If I’m an institution, I’m not trying to hide funds,” Pollak said. “I want to be able to move that asset privately when I’m looking to do something strategically with my funds.” Security and the multi-chain problem VerifiedX is pitching this model at a time when confidence in multichain infrastructure is shaky after several high-profile bridge exploits and protocol hacks. Pollak warns that many vulnerabilities arise in interoperability layers themselves: “Whenever you introduce cross-chain bridging, you introduce vulnerabilities.” A crowded field VerifiedX isn’t alone in tackling Bitcoin utility. Rootstock, an older sidechain, has long pursued EVM-compatible smart contracts for Bitcoin via merge-mining. Babylon is exploring restaking and shared security for proof-of-stake networks, reflecting a broader urgency to monetize or broaden BTC use cases. VerifiedX’s emphasis on native custody, Taproot integration, and optional zero-knowledge privacy is its bid to differentiate in that field. The larger question Whether Bitcoin’s hardline proponents will embrace added programmability remains uncertain. But the debate has clearly shifted. The question is no longer whether Bitcoin is valuable — it is, decisively — but how much utility can be safely built around it without compromising the qualities that made it the bedrock of crypto in the first place. VerifiedX is betting that programmable, private, and self-custodial models are the path forward.

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