Although Bitcoin has continued to move within a certain range in recent weeks, news of a new record has arrived.
According to Coindesk, the Bitcoin hash rate has surpassed 1 Zettahash for the first time.
In the news based on Glassnode data, it was stated that the Bitcoin (BTC) hash rate exceeded 1 zettahash (ZH/s) for the first time in its history based on the seven-day moving average.
While the hash rate has briefly reached 1 zettahash several times this year, this is the first time it has reached this level on the seven-day moving average.
Analysts expect this rapid increase in processing power to lead to a significant difficulty adjustment of over 7% in the coming days, which would be the second-largest upward adjustment of the year.
Difficulty adjustments occur approximately every two weeks, ensuring that a new block is added to the blockchain approximately every 10 minutes, regardless of the total mining power.
“With the hash rate increasing, Bitcoin mining difficulty is expected to increase by more than 7 percent. This is also expected to be the second-largest increase of the year.”
What is Bitcoin Mining Difficulty?
Bitcoin difficulty is an automatically adjusted property that determines how difficult it is to mine a Bitcoin block.
The Bitcoin network’s mining difficulty changes and updates automatically every 2,016 blocks. This is to maintain an average block generation time of 10 minutes.
There’s no close correlation between the price of BTC and the difficulty or hash rate of Bitcoin mining. Increasing difficulty on the Bitcoin network makes the network more secure and increases competition among miners.
In this context, although the hash rate is not a metric directly related to the price, it is interpreted as positive data for the price because when it is high, it means that the demand for the network and the security of the network are increasing.
*This is not investment advice.
Source: https://en.bitcoinsistemi.com/a-first-in-bitcoin-btc-history-hash-rate-reaches-peak-again/