- From: Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2013 13:41:40 +0200
- To: Brent Shambaugh <brent.shambaugh@gmail.com>
- Cc: public-rww <public-rww@w3.org>, Nathan Rixham <nrixham@gmail.com>, Web Payments <public-webpayments@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAKaEYhLs5dSQgCJa=zc2t+ob=qWggr5i0rMmNCOYjHXJjF+3Eg@mail.gmail.com>
On 6 June 2013 05:40, Brent Shambaugh <brent.shambaugh@gmail.com> wrote: > Melvin, > > I like your post. Concerning this subject, I noticed that Apostolis > Xekoukoulotakis posted to the p2p foundation mailing list with the title: > "ripple as a decentralized insurance system" (1). I also was involved in a > discussion with the Sensorica project, where I started learning more about > value networks (2). > Insurance is a valid service, and it's valid to pay for insurance. There's an issue with people trying to sell you insurance when you dont want (or need it). > > I am a bit concerned about what David Wood said about banks. I believe > that in the future they will still play a role. In Ripple, possibly as > Gateways. I hope to get back to this soon. > Banks are going nowhere. Just as newspapers evolved to take advantage of the internet, so banks (at least the smart ones) will evolve similarly. > > Brent > > (1) > https://lists.ourproject.org/pipermail/p2p-foundation/2013-May/005952.html > (2) > https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!category-topic/sensorica-infrastructure/2bb_Rmv_D > > > On Wed, Jun 5, 2013 at 11:50 AM, Melvin Carvalho <melvincarvalho@gmail.com > > wrote: > >> I've been thinking for a while about how to create a currency for the >> read write web. And I thought I'd share some preliminary ideas. >> Essentially this is bitcoin+ripple translated to the Web. >> >> *Introduction >> >> * >> For those not familiar with the bitcoin concept it's essentially a >> distributed ledger where each subject is a primary key in the ledger and >> can hold 0 or more coins. Coins are transferred using a signed and >> timestamped PKI transaction log from one address to another, in a >> distributed data base. >> >> *Addresses >> >> * >> I think using a portable URI for addresses is the thing that makes most >> sense. So possibilities for this may be a URN, or schemes such as di: >> (digest) or ni: (named information). Anyone should be able to generate an >> address, and they should be wide ranging to improve liquidity. >> >> *Balances >> >> * >> Balances can be calculated by summing all inputs to that address. You >> can additionally keep a state of balances using the payswarm vocab, or >> perhaps, goodRelations >> >> *Transactions >> >> * >> I think a distributed data base could be maintained using read / write >> web technologies, such as HTTP POST / PATCH or SPARQL Update. The >> signatures could be added using the WebKeys spec. >> >> *Distributed Database >> >> * >> There are challenges associated with maintaining a distributed database. >> I suggest we start small and whoever opts in can become part of the >> verification process. There are two recent methods for mitigating race >> conditions an important one of which is called "double spend". One is >> proof of work, the other is consensus based on a unique node list. I would >> suggest using both techniques. I'd like it to be possible to use both HTTP >> (with self signed certificates), HTTP, and (secure) websockets too as the >> transport layer. >> >> *Coin Creation >> >> * >> This tends to be the most contentious point, with people tending not to >> like the "premine" concept where you allocate coins to yourself. However >> companies like opencoin have successfully rolled out multi million or even >> billion dollar premine schemes. I would suggest coin creation in line with >> bitcoin, where they are created proportionally to those maintaining the >> integrity of rhe shared database. >> >> *Spam Protection >> >> * >> Given the nature of the system, it may be easy to spam the network with >> micro transactions. As such there should be a transaction fee where those >> that pay the highest fee are prioritized. >> >> *Trust and Reputation >> >> * >> I think it would also help to have a trust and reputation system added to >> the process, such that honest nodes benefit from acting honestly, and nodes >> which are dishonest or not up to date are considered less dubious. The >> nature of the function should be that it's exponentially harder to gain >> trust after you have a certain score. Similar to chess ELO ratings. >> >> *Linked Data and Exensibility >> >> * >> I think there should be a deep integration with web principles and linked >> data to promote an app eco system and allow unexpected reuse. Also it >> should allow extensions such as the ripple protocol's trust lines, IOUs and >> distributed markets, which are not initially scoped out. Reusing existing >> concepts such as the bitcon blockchain (e.g. so-called coloured coins), >> ripple ledger, opentransactions, payswarm and web credits should all be >> doable. >> >> >> Just some food for thought. Criticisms welcome. Please let me know if >> you're interested in running a node, and maybe we an get a reference >> implementation going, as proof of concept. >> > >
Received on Thursday, 6 June 2013 11:42:14 UTC