Revision as of 16:58, 29 April 2013 editCliff12345 (talk | contribs)2,311 edits Undid revision 552745228 Misplaced Pages operates on the usage of references, and the claims are true. I suspect a conflict of interest Talk:Litecoin#Criticism_section_details.2C_explanation_and_history.← Previous edit | Revision as of 17:04, 29 April 2013 edit undoCliff12345 (talk | contribs)2,311 edits Undid revision: The content that was restored seems to either be false (such as comments on confirmation time), not relevant to a Litecoin article (e.g. "Bitcoin does not suffer") or simply biased ("Litecoin's...designed to fail...algorithm").Next edit → | ||
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==== Pump and Dump Scheme ==== | ==== Pump and Dump Scheme ==== | ||
Some people claim that |
Some people claim that Litecoin is a ], rewarding those who get in sooner at the expense of those who adopt it just before the price falls. | ||
Additionally, people often complain that the Litecoin community misrepresents it in other ways, such as portraying "faster block times" as if it makes transactions faster, and scrypt as if it is resistant to ASIC or FPGA hardware, in order to pretend Litecoin has value and inflate its value. | |||
It's important to note, generally these critics do not think that blockchain currencies are pump and dump schemes ]; | |||
but rather that the existing network effect of ], combined with the lack of meaningful differentiation between Litecoin and Bitcoin as well as Litecoin's adoption of a "designed to fail" proof-of-work algorithm; | |||
that Litecoin is bound to fail in the end. | |||
Bitcoin does not suffer from these flaws and therefore does not fall under the pump and dump scheme, according to this argument. | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== |
Revision as of 17:04, 29 April 2013
| |||||
Unit | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plural | Litecoin, litecoins | ||||
Symbol | Ł | ||||
Nickname | LTC | ||||
Denominations | |||||
Subunit | |||||
0.001 | mLTC (millicoin) | ||||
0.000001 | μLTC (microcoin) | ||||
0.00000001 | Smallest unit | ||||
Demographics | |||||
Date of introduction | 7 October 2011 | ||||
User(s) | International | ||||
Issuance | |||||
Central bank | None. The Litecoin peer-to-peer network regulates and distributes through consensus in protocol. | ||||
Valuation | |||||
Inflation | Limited release (Geometric series, rate halves every 4 years reaching a final total of 84 million LTC) |
Litecoin (sign: Ł; abbrv: LTC) is a peer-to-peer cryptocurrency and open source software project released under the MIT/X11 license. Inspired by and similar to to Bitcoin (BTC), Litecoin creation and transfer is based on an open source encryption protocol and is not managed by any central authority. Litecoin is intended to improve upon Bitcoin and offers three key differences. Firstly, the Litecoin network processes a block every 2.5 minutes, rather than every 10 minutes, which allows for the faster confirmation of transactions. Secondly, the Litecoin network will produce 84 million litecoins which is four times as many as currency units as will be issued by the Bitcoin network. Thirdly, Litecoin uses scrypt in its proof-of-work algorithm: a sequential memory-hard function first conceived by Colin Percival, that makes mining easier to carry out on normal computers. Each litecoin is subdivided into 100,000,000 smaller units, defined by eight decimal places.
Transactions
A peer-to-peer network similar to Bitcoin's handles Litecoin's transactions, balances and issuance through Scrypt, the proof-of-work scheme (Litecoins are issued when a small enough hash value is found, at which point a block is created, the process of finding these hashes and creating blocks is called mining). The issuing rate forms a geometric series, and the rate halves every 4 years (every 840,000 blocks) reaching a final total of 84 million LTC. The memory intensive nature of Scrypt means that unlike with Bitcoin, Litecoin is better suited for GPU mining. FPGA and ASIC implementations are more expensive to create for Scrypt than for SHA-256 as used by Bitcoin.
Litecoins are currently traded for both fiat currencies and bitcoins, mostly on online exchanges. Reversible transactions (such as those with credit cards) are not normally used to buy litecoins as Litecoin transactions are irreversible, so there is the danger of chargebacks. As of 28th April 2013, 1 LTC is worth approximately 4.11 USD or 0.032 BTC. This makes Litecoin the second largest cryptocurrency by market cap with a cap of 70,000,000 USD.
History
Litecoin was released via an open-source client on Github on October 7th 2011. The current version of this client (as of 19th April 2013) is v0.6.3c.
Other clients have also been released.
More recently Litecoin has been covered in the news as a Bitcoin alternative.
Development
The Litecoin Developers have a new release 0.8.1 in the works which will help to modernize and enhance the network. This major upgrade will include all enhancements made in recent Bitcoin releases.
Criticism
This article's "criticism" or "controversy" section may compromise the article's neutrality. Please help rewrite or integrate negative information to other sections through discussion on the talk page. (April 2013) |
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (April 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Redundancy
Some believe that because Litecoin does not provide any features over what Bitcoin already provides, so they believe Litecoin is unlikely to match or surpass Bitcoin's value or user base.
Vulnerability to mining monopoly
Like Bitcoin, Litecoin can be attacked by an entity that can match or exceed the hash rate of the network, though such a 51% attack becomes more difficult to launch and maintain as the hash rate of the network grows. Some have argued that because Litecoin is designed to be inefficient on all common computers, a malicious entity need only produce a small batch of specialized hardware to overtake all the commodity mining systems combined. On the other hand, others have argued that the scrypt function simply makes it infeasible to create any specialised hardware; and that even if it were possible, specialised hardware would only strengthen the network, which happened with Bitcoin and ASICs.
Pump and Dump Scheme
Some people claim that Litecoin is a pump and dump scheme, rewarding those who get in sooner at the expense of those who adopt it just before the price falls.
See Also
- Anarcho-capitalism
- Anonymous Internet banking
- Complementary currency
- Crypto-anarchism
- Digital currency exchanger
- PPCoin
References
- ^ "Litecoin.org". Litecoin.org, April 2013. Litecoin.org. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
- (April 13 2013). Mining digital gold. The Economist. The Economist Newspaper. Retrieved April 27 2013.
- Satoshi, Nakamoto. "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System" (PDF). Bitcoin.org. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
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(help) - Simonite, Tom. "Bitcoin Isn't the Only Cryptocurrency in Town". Retrieved 24 April 2013.
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(help) - Powers, Shawn. "Cryptocurrency: Your Total Cost Is 01001010010" (PDF). Linux Journal, March 2012. Linux Journal. p. 29. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- BATR. "Bitcoins Risk Reward". Retrieved 24 April 2013.
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(help) - Percival, Colin. "Stronger Key Derivation Via Sequential Memory-Hard Functions" (PDF). Retrieved 24 April 2013.
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(help) - Dan Goodin. "Potent DDoS attacks on Mt. Gox delay rollout of new virtual currency". Ars Technica. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
- (21 October 2012). Litecoin Miner Status. FishGuy876's Blog. Retrieved April 27 2013.
- (21 October 2012). Using scrypt for user authentication. Retrieved April 27 2013.
- Coventry, Alex. "Nooshare" (PDF). MIT. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
These hash functions can be tuned to require rapid access a very large memory space, making them particularly hard to optimize to specialized massively parallel hardware.
- (21 October 2012). Comparison of online payment methods. Blockchain. Retrieved April 27 2013.
- ^ "LTC/USD". BTC-E. Retrieved 25 April 2013.
- "BTC/LTC". Vircurex. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
- (15 April 2013). Bitcoin Isn't the Only Cryptocurrency in Town. MIT Technology Review.
- Cryptocoin Mining Information
- BTC-E | Bitcoin Exchange, Namecoin Exchange, Litecoin Exchange, BTC Exchange
- "Search Results: Litecoin". Abe Search. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
- litecoin-project: litecoinn: Download Packages. 21st October 2012.
- electrum-client-litecoin. 21st October 2012.
- (April 13 2013). Mining digital gold. The Economist.
External Links
- Litecoin website
- Litecoin wiki
- Litecoin forum
- Litecoin Reddit community
- Litecoin block explorer (New)
- Litecoin block explorer (Original)
- Litecoin network charts and statistics
- Litecoin market charts
- Litecoin network statistics
- Online Litecoin wallet