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It’s been a week and a half since Jito announced BAM, Solana’s most significant transaction processing upgrade ever.
In my view, much of the public messaging surrounding the upgrade has focused on BAM’s privacy-preserving use of TEEs and ability to give apps better control over transaction execution. What hasn’t been covered quite as much, which both of my guests on the Lightspeed podcast spoke about this week, is how BAM plans to create additional revenue for Solana apps.
BAM plugins are programmable interfaces that apps can use to control how transactions are sequenced. One potential example could be taker speed bumps, a spread-tightening mechanism that the perps DEX Hyperliquid has deployed to great effect.
These plugins will also come with some “TBD fee model,” Jito Labs CEO Lucas Bruder told me, meaning applications can start generating revenue from the sequencing of transactions through BAM. This value is currently being captured by takers or arbitrageurs in the market, Bruder added.
If BAM works as advertised, plugins could provide applications with a hefty payday.
“What I think we’ll see is applications earning multiples more than validators and stakers,” Blockworks Research Analyst Carlos Gonzalez Campo said.
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