Primecoin

Primecoin

Primecoin logo
Denominations
Subunit
0.001 mXPM (millicoin)
0.000001 μXPM (microcoin)
0.00000001 Smallest unit
Plural Primecoin, primecoins
Symbol Ψ
Nickname XPM
Demographics
Date of introduction 7 July 2013[1]
User(s) International
Issuance
Central bank None, the primecoin peer-to-peer network regulates and distributes through consensus in protocol.
Valuation
Inflation Limited release, production rate before this limit re-evaluated with the production of every block (at a rate of approximately 1 block per minute) based on the difficulty with which primecoins are produced.

Primecoin (sign: Ψ; code: XPM) is a peer-to-peer open source cryptocurrency that implements a unique scientific computing proof-of-work system.[2] Primecoin's proof-of-work system searches for chains of prime numbers.[2] Primecoin was created by a person or group of people who use the pseudonym Sunny King. This entity is also related with the cryptocurrency Peercoin.[3][4] The Primecoin source code is copyrighted by a person or group called “Primecoin Developers”, and distributed under a conditional MIT/X11 software license.[5]

Primecoin has been described as the main cause of spot shortages of dedicated servers because at the time it was only possible to mine the currency with CPUs.[1][6] For the same reason, Primecoin used to be the target of malware writers.[7][8]

Features

When comparing Primecoin with today's most widely spread cryptocurrency called bitcoin some notable differences are:

Scarcity is governed by the nature of prime number distribution
Almost all cryptocurrencies in existence define their scarcity properties merely by a set of predefined values in source code, whereas scarcity of Primecoin is based purely on a relationship of a simple function and mathematical property of natural occurrence of prime chains in the set of whole numbers that are.
No predefined ultimate number of coins
Instead of having hard-set ultimate number of coins in its code like many other alternative cryptocurrencies, number of Primecoins released per block is always equal to 999 divided by the square of the difficulty.[9] There has been some attempts at approximating this number. The number of Primecoins that will be mined will be determined by the progress of its adaptation by the mining community, improvements that will be done to the mining algorithms and ultimately by Moore's law.
Difficulty adjustment is more frequent
Primecoin protocol adjusts its difficulty slightly after every block. The difficulty change that occurs each block is targeted at achieving target of one new block created once per minute.[9] As comparison the bitcoin protocol adjusts its difficulty every 2016 blocks, or approximately every two weeks.
Faster transaction confirmations
Since Primecoin blocks are generated 8 to 10 times as fast as bitcoin blocks on average, Primecoin transactions are confirmed approximately 8 to 10 times as fast.[9]

Proof-of-work system

Primecoin uses the finding of prime chains composed of Cunningham chains and bi-twin chains for proof-of-work, which can lead to useful byproducts.[2][9]

The system is designed so that the work is efficiently verifiable by all nodes on the Primecoin network.[2] To meet this requirement, the size of the prime numbers in the system cannot be too large.[2] The Primecoin proof-of-work system has the following characteristics:

  1. Cunningham chain of the first kind.
  2. Cunningham chain of the second kind.
  3. Bi-twin chain.

Other cryptocurrencies including bitcoin commonly use a Hashcash type of proof-of-work based on SHA-256 hash calculations, which are of no value beyond its own economy.[2][9]

List of largest known Cunningham chains of given length[10] includes several results generated by Primecoin miners.[11]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Clark, Jack (2013-07-16). "Virtual currency speculators shut down cloud". The Register. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 King, Sunny (pseudonym) (2013-07-07). "Primecoin: Cryptocurrency with Prime Number Proof-of-Work" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-11-07.
  3. Bradbury, Danny (2013-01-02). "Why are so many digital currency players anonymous?". CoinDesk. Retrieved 2014-03-14.
  4. Gilson, David (2013-07-10). "New currency Primecoin searches for prime numbers as proof of work". CoinDesk. Retrieved 2014-02-08.
  5. Primecoin Developers (2013-07-25). "Primecoin High Performance 0.1.1 BETA README" (Text file). Primecoin High Performance – Browse /0.1.1-hp8 at SourceForge.net. mikaelh2. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  6. Miller, Rich (2013-12-17). "Currency Miners Cause Spot Shortages of Dedicated Servers". Data Center Knowledge. Retrieved 2013-12-18.
  7. Muncaster, Phil (2014-01-17). "Bitcoin's so over. We're mining Primeco... Oh SNAP, my box is a ZOMBIE!". The Register. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  8. Goodin, Dan (2013-12-17). "What a successful exploit of a Linux server looks like". Ars Technica. Condé Nast. Retrieved 2014-02-02.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Buterin, Vitalik (2013-07-08). "Primecoin: the cryptocurrency whose mining is actually useful". Bitcoin Magazine. Coin Publishing Ltd.
  10. Augustin, Dirk. "Cunningham Chain records". primerecords.dk.
  11. "Record Primes". primecoin.io.
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