Olaoluwa Osuntokun, known widely by his online alias roasbeef, is a developer and researcher who serves as the Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Lightning Labs. He is a primary architect of the Lightning Network, a layer-2 protocol for Bitcoin, and the lead developer of Lightning Network Daemon (lnd), the network's most prevalent software implementation. [1] [2]
Osuntokun is a central figure in the development of Bitcoin's technical infrastructure, with contributions spanning core protocol improvements, second-layer solutions, and advanced cryptographic research. His work focuses on enhancing the scalability, privacy, and security of the Bitcoin network. [2]
Olaoluwa Osuntokun is a graduate of the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). His academic background provided a foundation for his subsequent career in software development and cryptography within the digital currency ecosystem. [1]
Osuntokun co-founded Lightning Labs with its CEO, Elizabeth Stark, to develop software that powers the Lightning Network. As CTO, he leads the company's technical vision and engineering efforts. His leadership is central to the creation and ongoing maintenance of lnd, a complete implementation of the Lightning Network written in the Go programming language. [1]
Before and alongside his work at Lightning Labs, Osuntokun made foundational contributions to the broader Bitcoin developer ecosystem. He was a primary contributor to btcd, a full-node Bitcoin implementation built in Go. This project and its associated library, btcsuite, serve as a critical infrastructure component for lnd and other Go-based Bitcoin applications. [2]
His professional affiliations, visible through his contributions to public code repositories, extend beyond his primary roles. He has contributed to projects associated with the Bitcoin Core repository (@bitcoin), the Decred cryptocurrency (@decred), and Blockstream's Elements sidechain project (@ElementsProject), demonstrating a wide range of involvement in blockchain technology. [2]
Osuntokun's career is marked by several key technical contributions and research initiatives that have shaped the Bitcoin and Lightning Network ecosystems.
lnd (Lightning Network Daemon)As the lead developer, Osuntokun has been the driving force behind lnd, which has become one of the most widely adopted implementations of the Lightning Network. His work on lnd involves protocol design, implementation of routing and payment channel logic, and ensuring the software's security and stability.
The project is a cornerstone of the Lightning Network, enabling near-instant, low-cost Bitcoin transactions. [1] [2]
btcd and btcsuitePrior to the widespread adoption of the Lightning Network, Osuntokun was a key developer for btcd. btcd is an alternative full-node implementation of the Bitcoin protocol, notable for being written entirely in Go.
This work was instrumental in creating btcsuite, a comprehensive set of Go libraries for building Bitcoin-related applications. The modular and robust nature of btcsuite made it the ideal foundation upon which Osuntokun and the Lightning Labs team built lnd. His deep involvement in this foundational layer highlights his expertise across the full Bitcoin technology stack. [2]
neutrino Light Client ProtocolOsuntokun was also a primary contributor to the development of Neutrino, a light client protocol for Bitcoin. Neutrino allows wallets and applications to synchronize with the Bitcoin network in a private and efficient manner, without requiring the user to download the entire blockchain.
This is achieved through client-side filtering of blocks, which offers significant privacy advantages over older light client models that would leak address information to third-party servers. Neutrino is a key component used by many Lightning Network mobile wallets. [2]
Beyond his work on specific software, Osuntokun is an active participant in the evolution of the Bitcoin protocol itself. He is a contributor and reviewer in the official repository for Bitcoin Improvement Proposals (BIPs).
BIPs are the formal mechanism for proposing and standardizing new features, changes, and improvements to the Bitcoin network. His involvement in this process indicates his influence on the long-term technical roadmap of Bitcoin's base layer. [2]
On April 9, 2026, Osuntokun and the team at Lightning Labs announced the release of a working prototype for a quantum-resistant wallet rescue tool for Bitcoin. This tool was presented as a significant step in future-proofing Bitcoin multi-signature wallets against the potential threat of quantum computers, which could one day be powerful enough to break current cryptographic standards. [3]
The tool provides a recovery mechanism for users of MuSig2-based multi-signature wallets, which are known for their efficiency and privacy. In a scenario where a user loses one of their signing keys or it is compromised by a future quantum adversary, the tool provides an "escape hatch" to recover the funds.
The underlying technology combines a novel application of BIP 32-style hierarchical derivation with composite public keys and signatures. It utilizes "Simple Taproot Asset-style trees," a form of Merkle tree, to commit the wallet's state and recovery information on-chain in a compact and verifiable way.
His research in this area is further evidenced by his development activity in public repositories.
This includes work on go-zkvm, a project exploring zero-knowledge virtual machines, and bip32-pq-zkp. The bip32-pq-zkp repository specifically points to the development of a Post-Quantum (PQ) scheme for BIP32-based wallets, likely integrating Zero-Knowledge Proofs (ZKPs) for enhanced security and verification. [2]
In early 2026, Osuntokun addressed a potential vector for network instability on the Lightning Network by implementing rate-limiting for incoming onion messages within lnd.
Onion messages are a feature used for sending arbitrary data across the network. The enhancement he introduced helps mitigate potential denial-of-service (DoS) or spam attacks that could exploit this feature, thereby improving the overall resilience and stability of the network for all users. [2]
Osuntokun is an active and recognized voice in the technical Bitcoin community. He is widely known by the alias "roasbeef," which he uses for his handles on social media platform X (@roasbeef) and code-hosting platform GitHub (roasbeef).
He uses these platforms to discuss his ongoing research, explain complex technical concepts, and engage with the developer community. His GitHub profile biography reads "half-man, half-beef." [1] [2] [4]