The price of Stellar Lumens (XLM) shot up 60% in the past 24 hours and crossed the 20 cent mark for the first time since Sept. 2018. The ‘stellar’ price action followed an announcement by the project’s developers that a new version of the Stellar public network protocol had been implemented by validators.
The Protocol 15 upgrade was voted into effect at 4:00 PM UTC on Nov. 23 and introduces two new features that aim to reduce the level of complexity presented to users of Stellar network-based apps and services.
Price action for Stellar Lumens has been relatively subdued over the past year until Nov. 21, when trading volume started to build. XLM has doubled in price over the last 48 hours and leads the top 100 coins by market cap in weekly gains, topping out at +125%. It is among a handful of coins currently leading the altcoin pack in what could potentially be a long-awaited “alt season.”
$XLM Stellar Lumens was the first altcoin I bought
Never ended up selling any, and have been adding to my stack for the last couple years
Glad to have a mountain of it at a $.07 avg entry now ✅
Initially forked from Ripple Labs protocol by Jed McCaleb and launched in July 2014, Stellar seeks to lessen the cost of cross-border payments using blockchain. The project is particularly focused on serving unbanked or underbanked regions of the world where access to traditional financial services is either nonexistent or prohibitively costly.
Stellar’s Protocol 15 upgrade includes two new components designed to enhance user experience while retaining a defense against “farm attacks” and other methods in which bad actors may try to subvert the purpose of the network. A farm attack is where multiple accounts are created by an entity with the aim of harvesting the small amounts of funds sent to those accounts by service providers which are required to activate the account.
According to Stellar’s official blog, the Protocol 15 features have been in development for over a year and address some of the “biggest pain points” for developers when building apps and services for customers on Stellar.
After the upgrade, developers can create simpler, better user experiences that abstract away the complexity of blockchain, and do it without losing any of the advantages of a fast, cheap, and permissionless public ledger.
Stellar has also just announced a partnership with East African business-to-business payment platform provider ClickPesa, which serves six countries in the region. According to Stellar’s blog post, ClickPesa was motivated to use Stellar upon recognizing an “opportunity to reduce the friction inherent to intra-African cross-border payments and P2P payment activity.”
In October, Stellar announced that stablecoin USDC would be hosted on its blockchain at some point in 2021, furthering its mission of simplifying cross-border money transfers. Stellar Lumens’ extremely low transaction fees and 4-5 second settlement times are among its top selling points as a cryptocurrency.
All risk, no gain? The vague definition of stablecoins is causing problems
Published
13 hours ago
on
January 25, 2021
By
Sometimes, “stablecoins” and variants such as “algorithmic stablecoins” function like historical names, as they refer to projects that call themselves stablecoins, such as Basis Cash, Elastic Set Dollar, Frax and their clones.
The word “stablecoin” can be used as a logical description for “a cryptocurrency designed to have low price volatility” and has “stores of value or units of account,” or “a new type of cryptocurrency that often have their value pegged to another asset… designed to tackle the inherent volatility seen in cryptocurrency prices,” or a currency that can “act as a medium of monetary exchange and a mode of storage of monetary value, and its value should remain relatively stable over longer time horizons.”
On the more metaphysically speculative end, some have defined a stablecoin as “an asset that prices itself, rather than an asset that is priced by supply and demand. This goes against everything we know about how markets work.”
Circularity is the core issue, as I see it. The alleged deficiency of Bitcoin (BTC) as money and a vague definition originally inspired a host of stablecoin projects. The design features of these projects have now been incorporated back into the stablecoin definition.
Haseeb Qureshi — a software engineer, author and famous altruist — defines a stablecoin as simply a price peg. Yet, it is not obvious that anything with a peg should bear the name of stablecoin. Ampleforth has a “peg” and has been bucketed into the stablecoin category. The founding team routinely clarifies that it is no such thing.
So, who is right?
Another example of just what exactly is “stable” in a stablecoin — the peg or its value? Wrapped Bitcoin (wBTC) is perfectly pegged to Bitcoin — one wBTC will always be one BTC. Is that a stablecoin?
According to the original motivations for creating stablecoins, BTC is not a stable means of exchange, even though Bitcoin is the canonical “store of value” asset.
Having clarified the problem — that no one knows how to define or recognize a stablecoin — the rest of this essay outlines a solution. It provides a well-defined description of value as a relational property, namely, “value in terms of a measurement unit.”
Using this description, I then comprehensively classify all digital assets along two dimensions — risk of loss, or the probability of realizing a decrease in value, and risk of gain, or the probability of realizing an increase in value. We can then precisely and logically define stablecoins: assets where the risk of loss and risk of gain are both zero.
That is:
p(gain)=p(loss)=0
I call this a risk-defined stablecoin.
It is clear that today’s algorithmic stablecoins have a risk of loss but no risk of gain. Thus, not only are they not stablecoins, but they are terrible financial assets. I finish by considering whether it makes sense to expand the concept of a risk-defined stablecoin to a more general concept centered on expected value; an expected-value stablecoin is one where the probabilities of loss and gain, weighted by the magnitude of loss and gain, are perfectly offset and net out to zero.
I conclude that the complexity and ergodicity of such a concept rule it out as a useful stablecoin definition.
What is value?
What “value” means is not entirely clear, as evidenced by continuing debates about the “true” rate of inflation. We can ask: Value in terms of what?
That is, we decide to treat value as a relational property between the object being measured and the thing doing the measuring. It is like asking for height — do you want it in inches or centimeters? For our purposes, can we define a function that maps an asset to a set of numerical values in a chosen unit? I call it: Value.
For example, if the chosen unit is the U.S. dollar, and the item is a bag of chips,
ValueUSD(chips)=$5.
We could just as well have written Heightinches(table)=35in.
Risk of loss, risk of gain
The value of an asset changes over time, so we can expand our Value function to reflect the idea of “the value of an asset, in terms of a unit, at a certain time” by adding the time (t) at which we are measuring value:
ValuetUnit(asset)=x
We can define risks as the probability that, at a randomly chosen time in the future, the Value function would show a decrease or increase in value.
In practical terms, this means that if I convert the asset into my chosen unit, I would realize a loss or a gain.
A risk-defined stablecoin
We now have enough to create a well-defined description for a stablecoin. A stablecoin is an asset where the risk of loss and the risk of gain are both zero. That is: p(gain)=p(loss)=0.
This means that if I sell the stablecoin asset in the future, I will neither experience a loss nor gain in value, as measured in my chosen unit.
The Boston Consulting Group’s famous matrix was invented by the company’s founder, Bruce Henderson, in the 1970s. With some rearrangement, we can repurpose the Boston Consulting Group growth-share matrix to classify all digital assets by their risk of loss and risk of gain. The four categories are still stars, dogs, unknowns and cash cows.
A star investment, with no risk of loss but a risk of gain, is rare nowadays but abundant in hindsight, such as when one regrets selling Bitcoin back in 2010. Stars also exist in the imagination. Such was the case with the investors in Bernie Madoff’s fund. But those kinds of investments quickly reveal themselves to be dogs. Dogs are sure losers — there is no risk of gain, but if you hold them long enough, the risk of loss becomes an actual loss.
Star investments are most abundant in hindsight when we can no longer buy them:
I’d be a *billionaire* now if I hadn’t sold the 55,000 bitcoins I mined on my laptop in 2009-2010 way too early (mostly before 2012). That is regretful, but then again, with the early bitcoiners we set in motion something greater than personal gain.
Unknowns are your regular investments — you could be up or down in terms of value, depending on the day. Most digital assets, even Bitcoin, fall into this category. Lastly, cash cows are investments that have minimal risk of loss or gain. They are dependable. We can now take those projects that have been named as stablecoins to see which truly fit.
Let’s put some major digital assets and stablecoins into the gain-loss matrix.
Projects called algorithmic stablecoins are stablecoins in name only. Because of their multiple token designs, they have no risk of gain — as all of the new supply is given to investors — but holders retain a risk of loss.
Price peg is not enough. The expected value of owning an asset could be positive or negative, but it is not zero. Another lesson is that it is important to specify a unit when discussing value. If our measurement unit is the U.S. dollar, then wBTC is not a stablecoin. But if we are defining value in terms of BTC, then wBTC is the perfect stablecoin.
Lastly, risk assessment is hard. I’ve received pushback about classifying Tether (USDT) as a stablecoin, given its counterparty risk.
These are all valid points.
Except under extraordinary circumstances, no stablecoin is truly free of the risk of loss. Perhaps Tether is a cross between a dog and a cow.
Nonetheless, it should be clear that certain projects egregiously appropriate the term “stablecoin” in a bid to grant investors a risk of gain while saddling holders with a risk of loss. Since no sane person would hold these assets on their books, however, it is almost certain that these dogs will go extinct.
An expected-value stablecoin?
Astute readers will have noticed that expected value is not just a function of the probability of loss and gain — the magnitude of losses and magnitude of gains is just as important.
For example, assume I have a fair die. If I roll a six, I win $60. If I roll any other number I lose $6. The expected value of rolling the die is:
But can we expand the concept of a risk-defined stablecoin into that of an expected-value stablecoin? In other words, would it suffice for the expected value of holding an asset to be zero? Using the die example above, this condition would be met if I won only $30 instead of $60. So, any time I try to convert this “DieCoin” into U.S. dollars, there is a five-sixth chance I will realize a loss in value, and a one-sixth chance I will realize a gain. But because the gain is so much larger than the loss, these cancel out.
I think this could be a clever approach that can be realized through a set of derivative contracts. However, it would lose the property of allowing holders to exit their position with minimal impact to their portfolios.
This should remind us that, ultimately, definitions are artifacts of a community of speakers. And I find it doubtful that more than a few people will find an expected value definition persuasive.
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.
The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.
Manny Rincon-Cruz serves as an advisor to the Ampleforth project and is a co-author of the protocol’s white paper. Manny is a researcher at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, where he helped to launch and currently serves as the executive director of the History Working Group.
It’s time to put the dukes down and work together for blockchain’s future
Published
14 hours ago
on
January 25, 2021
By
Humans over the centuries found themselves quarreling with each other over everything from food to land to ideology, only to later find themselves at peace and cooperating. Later, once more, they’d return to draw arms. Great schisms between Catholicism and Eastern Orthodox Christianity later repeated with the Protestant–Catholic wars of the 17th century, until peace finally settled upon the parties centuries after they’d begun.
Fast forward 400 years, and it’s clear that technology has done nothing to curb our tribal instincts. If anything, the rise of blockchain has magnified these instincts in a destructive way. Tribalism impedes blockchain from maximizing its limitless potential, yet the “your coin vs. my coin” attitude reigns supreme, including among industry leaders. At the same time, our ability to navigate choppy waters and ride the tide of mass adoption rests on our willingness to work together despite our base tendencies for tribal behavior.
Tribalism runs deep
The issue runs deeper than economic and political guiding principles, though. Many cryptocurrencies develop loyal followings and become tribal in nature, taking up ambivalent if not blatantly hostile attitudes toward other coins.
One can easily find barbs in the cryptoverse, on Twitter or on Reddit, where users troll other coins with taunts like “shitcoin.” This toxic brand of tribalism also trickles down to blockchain developers, who may discard superior technologies just because they belong to a different camp. Obviously, this is detrimental to the progress of blockchain applications as a whole.
This tribalism could potentially scare newcomers and talented developers away and stunt its growth and development. As such, this immature feud of superiority complexes that’s led to toxic tribalism within the blockchain community must be put to an end for the sake of all parties that, in the end, share the same ultimate goal of propelling blockchain into the mainstream.
A bigger, tastier, digital pie
Many of us recall the witty Wendy’s jabs at its competitors and other users on Twitter from the last decade. But we can hardly imagine the big guns openly calling each other’s products “s—” or coining other crass monikers of their products on Twitter in the same way crypto users have trashed competing digital currencies.
But there is a bright side and a way forward.
For starters, the existence of fierce competition and intense passion for products reveals there is a vibrant market to begin with. Almost every venture capital presentation includes a slide about one’s competitors. Furthermore, even though blockchain projects may compete with one another for users, developer mindshare and community, there is an overarching need for collaboration in expanding blockchain’s reach. Currently, only a fraction of the population has any exposure to the blockchain space, and uniting to bridge the gaps for newcomers should take priority over petty internal contests.
There’s an understanding among businesses that competition is healthy and “may the best man win” and not “may the best man win and take shots at the competitor with slander or libel.” This understanding is precisely what would benefit the crypto and blockchain worlds: healthy competition without the snobbery that exists today.
Indeed, many in the blockchain space are seeking to turn the corner and find a new path. With interoperability on the cusp of becoming reality, many developers are uniting to cooperate on bridging between chains. The results of such technical progress are monumental, signifying a palpable unity among developers to see through the success of the underlying engine for blockchain.
The interconnectedness of chains, at both a technical and ideological level, leverages Metcalfe’s Law to spur growth for all. Metcalfe’s Law states that the value or utility of a network is proportional to the square of the number of nodes it has connected. Connecting chains and ecosystems together exponentially accelerates Metcalfe’s Law at work. These kinds of healthy competitions are what’s necessary to advance the cause of decentralized finance — less protectionism, more fraternity. Polkadot and Cosmos are thriving decentralized communities and are examples of what mature cooperation can bring forth inside DeFi.
The blockchain dream may have a long way to go before blossoming into the fruitful ecosystem pioneers dreamed of it becoming. It is true that a house divided against itself cannot stand, and the case could not be more evident in the world of blockchain. It’s time for developers and crypto enthusiasts to put their dukes down and work together.
The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.
Beni Hakak is the CEO and co-founder of LiquidApps. He was formerly the director of operations at Bancor and a strategic consultant manager at Ernst & Young. Prior to that, Beni had served in an elite technology unit of the Israeli Defense Forces and graduated from Israel’s top technology institute, Technion, in industrial engineering and management. Beni discovered blockchain technology four years ago and has been creating, advising and working for companies in the space ever since.
Trials of blockchain-aided voting in India that would enable voters to post ballots from outside their home provinces are to begin soon.
Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora said that research using the cutting-edge technology had already started and that mock trials were to be launched in the very near future, as reported by The Wire.
India’s Election Commission worked alongside researchers from the Indian Institute of Technology Madras in creating a secure way to verify identities and enable voting from far-flung regions of the country, and beyond. On the same day, Arora confirmed a proposal that would give Indians living abroad the chance to engage in the voting process.
The blockchain aspect of the system would see personalized e-ballot papers generated by the blockchain once a voter’s identity has been verified. Subsequent votes are then encrypted, generating a blockchain hash, explained former Senior Deputy Election Commissioner Sandeep Saxena.
“After a voter’s identity is established by the system, a blockchain-enabled personalised e-ballot paper will be generated. When the vote is cast, the ballot will be securely encrypted and a blockchain hashtag generated. This hashtag notification will be sent to various stakeholders, in this case the candidates and political parties.”
Saxena explained that the system isn’t designed to allow people to vote from home. Instead, they would still have to congregate at a designated polling area, just not the one in the polling region in which they’re registered.
Emphasizing the early stage at which the project still remained, Saxena said voters wishing to utilize this voting procedure would probably have to arrange it in advance.
On the other side of the world, the two most recent elections in the United States were marred by unfounded accusations of vote manipulation, whether by Russian collusion or rigged vote counting. The rise of blockchain technology amid such furor has led some to suggest its ability to secure cryptocurrencies could also be applied to the election process.