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I'm seeing lots of bitcoin-esque alternatives mentioned here. What alternatives exist and how do they differ from Bitcoins?
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I'm seeing lots of bitcoin-esque alternatives mentioned here. What alternatives exist and how do they differ from Bitcoins?
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There are a number of other cryptocoins in use alongside Bitcoin, the most notable are:
A list of them is also maintained on the Bitcoin Wiki.
There is a relative ease in creating new cryptocoins, as you can just tweak the main client, encode a new genesis block and start your alternatives with small effort.
Can you place this link somewhere prominent in your answer: https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/List_of_alternative_cryptocurrencies
5 Worth mentioning that SolidCoins variants are closed-source, to the best of my knowledge. And Tenebrix had a few million coins pre-mined. There was a thread over at the alternative currency subforum that compared the coins. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?board=67.0
Also worth mentioning Solidcoin is not completely p2p. – Amin – 2011-11-14T09:03:07.713
Solidcoin is not closed source, although the lead developer often does nor post incremental changes to the code to a source distribution network (i.e. github) because githug received a C&D from someone in the bitcoin community but you can see the bottom of the downloads page for the source code. (http://wiki.solidcoin.info/wiki/Downloads#Source) It is worth noting that the code within v2.0, although derived from bitcoin has not broken any licensing agreements, but anyone interested in the currency can download the source and review it if that have questions.
Also, the dev team is currently in the process of re-writing a client and server version of the currency and there is even a plan to rebrand the coin. The re-write will be nearly 100% free of any original bitcoin code. Follow along at http://solidcointalk.org/topic/589-solidcoin-v30-major-announcement/
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Currently the most comprehensive list is curated here:
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There is also TimeKoin; see www.timekoin.org
What does it mean "controlled by time", doesn't make much sense to me. – o0'. – 2013-03-23T07:43:08.837
How do you prevent a single user from spinning up ten servers? It seems like you're functionally allocating coins by how many IP addresses someone has. – Nick ODell – 2015-09-29T21:28:53.553
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The best competitor is probably ppCoin (PPC) http://www.ppcoin.org. I'm surprised it has not been mentioned.
ppCoin has a lot of advantages over bitcoin, including:
The last point is really relevant because bitcoin users tend to horde than spend.
ppCoin mining pool: ppcpool.bitparking.com
ppCoin exchange: ppcexchange.bitparking.com
It's profitable and you can mine a lot of coins quickly, but most importantly there's a lot of long-term potential for growth.
1and your affiliation with ppCoin would be...? – 7anner – 2013-06-24T18:46:30.070
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There is a design specification (but not yet working code) for AnonyMint a.k.a. AnonyCoin.
Claims to fix what are claimed to be fatal flaws in Bitcoin.
UPDATE: the algorithm for the stability of value has been added.
P.S. I am the designer and I designed it in one day, after learning from scratch about Bitcoin the previous day.
Anonymously downvoting because you think something is a threat to Bitcoin is irrational, because the best way to protect the future of Bitcoin is to enumerate and improve its weakness. However, the schedule of Bitcoin 's debasement is non-negotiable.
Anonymously downvoting because this is not yet a released product is a mockery considering my specification is much superior to TimeKoin's incomprehensible description, yet its answer above has an upvote. And the comprehensive list includes many alternatives in various states of development.
Why exactly would it be more difficult for an attacker to get a large number of hard-drives than a large number of ASICs? P.S. Why do you always complain about downvotes, then post irrelevant qualifications?
1 @NickODell because everybody already has a hard-drive :wink:. That was explained in the linked description. I don't want to get in a pointless argument about "Those who talk, don't build". I've built a lot of really intense s/w since 1986 across any genre that I choose to dive into. Note the linked description doesn't yet explain the self-adjusting model for the debasement to control stability and counter the "volatility attack". I'm working on it now & will edit my answer.
@NickODell there is also some directly related experience from 2008 and Bittorrent. I cringe to link to that, since I've learned so much since then, but the technical point I made there was valid.
1@NickODell let me expound a bit to make it more clear for those who can't reason the 2nd and 3rd order effects. TPTB are not likely to need to take down P2P currency until it becomes a threat, which means a significant % of the population using it. In that case, you want to maximally leverage the resources the population already has against the attacker, i.e. millions of hard-drives. Capiche? – Shelby Moore III – 2013-03-23T16:09:58.730
Worth mentioning this answer.
– o0'. – 2013-04-15T07:13:53.903Lohoris' link can be summarized by a deeper link, a "List of all cryptocoins" on bitcointalk.org.
– pyramids – 2013-11-28T14:05:54.213