Decred | |
---|---|
![]() Decred | |
Denominations | |
Ticker symbol | DCR |
Subunits | |
1⁄100000000 | atom |
Development | |
White paper | "Decred: Overview" |
Code repository | github |
Website | decred |
Ledger | |
Ledger start | 8 February 2016 |
Hash function | BLAKE-256 |
Block reward | 12.08 DCR((As of September 2018)) |
Block time | 5 minutes |
Block explorer | explorer |
Circulating supply | 8,468,245 ((As of September 2018)) |
Supply limit | 21,000,000 |
Decred (/ˈdi:ˈkred/, /dɪˈkred/, dee-cred) is an open-source, blockchain-based cryptocurrency, similar to Bitcoin.[1][2] Decred was launched in February 2016[3] by the bitcoin developers that engineered btcsuite,[4] an alternative full-node Bitcoin implementation written in the Go (golang) programming language and used by development projects such as Ethereum, Factom, BitGo, OpenBazaar, and the Lightning Network.[5]
On February 7, 2016 Decred was released by Chicago-based Company 0.[3]
Decred v1.0.0 was released on April 25, 2017.[6]
Decred developers executed an atomic swap between Decred (DCR) and Litecoin (LTC) in September 2017.[7][8]
Decred is a distributed public ledger which operates via a hybridized Proof-of-Work (PoW), Proof-of-Stake (PoS) blockchain consensus protocol.[9][10]
Both Proof-of Work and Proof-of-Stake mechanisms are used to provide the consensus that confirms new blocks including transactions. Such hybridized Proof-of-Work and Proof-of-Stake systems are also referred to as Proof-of-Activity (PoA).[11] PoA is a consensus protocol introduced by the Proof of Activity: Extending Bitcoin’s Proof of Work via Proof of Stake whitepaper,[12] co-authored by Litecoin founder Charlie Lee. Critics of Proof-of-Activity have asserted that such a mechanism has the potential of being prone to the downsides of both Proof-of-Work (excessive energy usage) and Proof-of-Stake (lack of disincentive for violating consensus) simultaneously.[10]
In June 2017 Decred became the first cryptocurrency project to approve a change to its protocol through a binding on-chain vote. Much has been written about the governance of the Bitcoin protocol, wherein changes require agreement between a broad array of stakeholders but without a formal method of establishing that agreement.[13][14] Bitcoin is an open source project, and in principle anyone can contribute, but a small group of software developers control whether changes to the Bitcoin Core github repository are accepted.[13] For a change to be adopted it must also be accepted by miners of the currency, who must adopt a new version of the software, and ultimately merchants and users of the currency, who must also adopt this software and accept a new version or chain as having value in place of the old version. The loosely defined method of establishing consensus for a change to the protocol has been identified as a barrier to the speed and efficiency with which the Bitcoin protocol can be updated.[15][14]
The first change in the Decred protocol to be adopted using this method in June 2017 changed the Proof of Stake staking algorithm to simplify the process of buying tickets. This change was contentious in the sense that participants in Proof of Work mining were incentivised to reject it because it decreased the fees they could expect to receive, but stakeholders (i.e. PoS Miners) were able to enforce their decision that it should be accepted.[16]
Ten percent of the Decred block reward goes into a "project subsidy" wallet, to be used to fund development and promotion of the project. The project's 2018 roadmap includes a plan for decentralizing the control of these funds, whereby community members can submit proposals for how these funds should be spent and ticket holders will vote to decide which proposals are approved.[17] The foundation of this system, Politeia launched with a contest to develop use-cases for the platform beyond the role it will play in Decred's governance, and the winners were announced in February 2018.[18]