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About PPC

The Peercoin network activated in 2012 and is one of the first cryptocurrencies to ever be released. It is responsible for inventing proof-of-stake consensus, which makes it the first efficient and sustainable public blockchain technology. It is extremely low-cost to operate and requires very little energy to secure. In addition, it is also the first blockchain capable of allowing its protocol rules to be governed directly by its users (coin holders) rather than external miners, making for a network that is more decentralized, democratic and easily secured by people all over the world.

The Peercoin Team believes that adapting blockchains for wide scale use only through on-chain transactions will negatively affect the decentralization level and security of the network over time, therefore we choose to develop the Peercoin blockchain as a base layer settlement network with a sole focus on securing all forms of value recorded into the chain. This can be accomplished through Peercoin's philosophy of preserving and maximizing decentralization (which increases security) by developing the majority of features and technologies on top of the blockchain, rather than directly into the blockchain protocol itself.

Thus the Peercoin Team focuses on developing second layer protocols and sub-networks that can interact with the base layer blockchain to adapt it for wide scale use and improve functionality such as tokens, smart contracts and high speed low cost transaction processing. In this way, Peercoin will act as a secure and censorship resistant base layer for the future blockchain connected world.

Peercoin (PPC) is a cryptocurrency launched in 2013. PPC has a current supply of 29.17M with 29.17M in circulation. The last known price of PPC is 0.394671530049 USD and is 0.011142672266 over the last 24 hours. It is currently trading on active market(s) with $41,902.93 traded over the last 24 hours. More information can be found at http://www.peercoin.net.

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PPC Price Statistics
PPC’s Price Today
24h Price Change
+$0.0111426722662.91%
24h Volume
$41,902.93255.06%
24h Low / 24h High
$0 / $0
Volume / Market Cap
0.003639489292
Market Dominance
0.00%
Market Rank
#1080
PPC Market Cap
Market Cap
$11.51M
Fully Diluted Market Cap
$11.51M
PPC Price History
7d Low / 7d High
$0 / $0
All-Time High
$0
All-Time Low
$0
PPC Supply
Circulating Supply
29.17M
Total Supply
29.17M
Max Supply
0
Updated Oct 05, 2024 9:30 am
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PPC
Peercoin
$0.394671530049
$0.011142672266(+2.91%)
Mkt Cap $11.51M
There's nothing here for now
IcomTech Founder Sentenced To 10 Years For Wire Fraud
IcomTech Founder Sentenced To 10 Years For Wire Fraud
According to Cointelegraph, David Carmona, the founder of the cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme IcomTech, has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Carmona was identified as the mastermind behind IcomTech, which targeted working-class individuals by promising them financial freedom in exchange for their investments. United States Attorney Damian Williams stated that Carmona misled investors by claiming their funds would be used for crypto trading and mining, with profits doubling every six months. However, these promises were false, and when the scheme collapsed, victims were left with nothing. Carmona's sentence includes a 121-month prison term and three years of supervised release. The IcomTech Ponzi scheme defrauded victims of approximately $8.4 million between mid-2018 and the end of 2019. Carmona and other promoters traveled across the US and overseas, hosting extravagant expos to attract victims. They often arrived in expensive cars and wore luxurious clothing to create an illusion of financial success, convincing potential investors to join the scheme. However, many victims soon faced difficulties withdrawing their supposed profits, encountering excuses, delays, and hidden fees from the IcomTech team. As complaints increased, IcomTech introduced a token called 'Icoms' to raise additional funds, falsely claiming it would be accepted by companies for payments. These tokens were essentially worthless, leading to further losses when IcomTech collapsed in 2019 and ceased making payments. Carmona pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy in December 2023. Other key figures in the scheme, including former IcomTech CEO Marco Ruiz Ochoa and promoters David Brend and Gustavo Rodriguez, have also been convicted and sentenced for their roles in the fraud.
Oct 05, 2024 8:43 am
Speculation Surrounds Len Sassaman As Potential Bitcoin Inventor
Speculation Surrounds Len Sassaman As Potential Bitcoin Inventor
According to Cointelegraph, deceased computer scientist and privacy advocate Len Sassaman has unexpectedly become a topic of interest as bettors speculate on an upcoming HBO documentary that claims to reveal the identity of Bitcoin's inventor. Information about Leonard Harris Sassaman’s early life is limited. He attended a private school in Pennsylvania and was recognized as a cryptography prodigy. In his late teens, Sassaman moved to San Francisco, California, where he became involved with the cypherpunks, a group of computer privacy pioneers from the late 1980s. He later studied under blockchain inventor David Chaum. Sassaman contributed to projects such as Pretty Good Privacy software and its update, GNU Privacy Guard. Alongside his wife, computer scientist Meredith Patterson, he founded the SaaS startup Osogato. At the time of his death, Sassaman was a doctoral student in electrical engineering at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium. He died by suicide on July 3, 2011, at the age of 31. A memorial to him was encoded into Block 138725 of the Bitcoin blockchain. Sassaman and Patterson married in 2006 and remained together until his death. Patterson has stated that she does not believe her husband was Satoshi Nakamoto. However, there is circumstantial evidence suggesting Sassaman could be Nakamoto. He left behind numerous publications, conference presentations, and other academic activities, indicating his capability of inventing Bitcoin. Sassaman was a member of the International Financial Cryptography Association and frequently spoke on financial cryptography. Linguistic analysis also suggests that Sassaman could be Bitcoin’s inventor, as Nakamoto went silent two months before Sassaman’s death. Additionally, the $64 billion in Bitcoin held by Nakamoto remains untouched.
Oct 05, 2024 8:33 am

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is Peercoin?

    Peercoin, also known as PPC or Peer-to-Peer Coin, was created by Sunny King and his team and launched in August 2012. It is the first blockchain to implement Proof-of-Stake consensus.

    The primary inspiration behind the creation of Peercoin was to address a number of perceived shortcomings of Bitcoin, including energy efficiency, security and sustainability, decentralization and long-term viability.

    Essentially it was designed as an enhanced replacement for Bitcoin. As such, it was originally forked from Bitcoin and uses the same UTXO style blockchain. However, Peercoin's code was modified to introduce Proof-of-Stake as its primary consensus protocol. The next section explains how this makes for a better blockchain.

    Given that Peercoin uses most of the same code, it can easily port new features from Bitcoin and utilize any of the supporting infrastructure, including tech advancements like Taproot or Lightning Network. Peercoin is the only Proof-of-Stake blockchain that uses modern Bitcoin code, making it the perfect drop-in replacement.

    Peercoin also has a dedicated community, is actively developed, fairly distributed, has low barriers of participation, can do everything that Bitcoin does, minus the 13 TWh of energy usage, and it's not a scam.

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  • What is the Difference Between Proof-of-Stake and Proof-of-Work?

    In a Proof-of-Work blockchain, new blocks are created by mining, but in Peercoin’s Proof-of-Stake, new blocks are created by staking.

    In a Proof-of-Work blockchain, the act of mining involves using computer processing power to solve blocks. The miner who solves the block first has the privilege of adding that block of transactions to the blockchain, earning them new coins as a reward for their service to the network.

    Ultimately, miners are responsible for validating and processing transactions on a blockchain network, and electricity is the scarce resource they use to do this work.

    Naturally, miners will attempt to solve and produce blocks faster than their competitors in an effort to earn more rewards for themselves. Becoming faster than the competition requires more processing power, which inevitably requires more electricity to be burned, an incredibly wasteful process.

    This process works to secure a blockchain, however it ends up centralizing power over the network with pool operators, as most miners will lend their hash power to a few large mining pools in an effort to continue earning rewards.

    Economies of scale also play a factor in centralizing Proof-of-Work blockchains, with miners who manage to grow so large that they are able to get better deals on hardware and negotiate better energy prices. They will always outcompete the small home users and drive them out of profitability.

    In Peercoin’s Proof-of-Stake system, the scarce resource used to secure the blockchain is not electricity, but time. Basically, the older your coins are, the more time they’ve accumulated sitting in your wallet. Coins with a higher time accumulation have more power to participate in producing blocks and securing the network.

    Let’s say you own 100 peercoins, and you want to start minting new blocks. After sitting in your wallet for 30 days, you will have accumulated 3000 “coin days”, because each of those 100 coins is 30 days old. These coin days are the actual minting power of your coins. You can think of your coin days as being similar to your hash rate from traditional mining. Accumulating more coin days means you’re more likely to produce a new block on the chain.

    There are a number of rules in place to make this a fair system. 30 days is the minimum time you need to hold your peercoins in your wallet before they can become eligible to start minting. If you transact with your coins, that timer will reset.

    Every time you produce a block, you will earn new peercoins as a reward (about 3-5% annually) and the age of the participating coins will reset to zero. After 90 days, peercoins will hit their maximum minting power. These time limits are all security features designed to decentralize minting power and keep the process fair.

    Using time as an integral part of Peercoin's security means that blockchain security becomes inexpensive. It no longer becomes necessary to consume some scarce resource (like burning electricity), which could be used in a more beneficial way.

    Why waste electricity at all when a green alternative exists that can perform the same function? Time is also a scarce resource. It is limited. You can't create more of it, and you can't manipulate it, or speed it up to benefit yourself. All you can do is wait, and waiting doesn’t cost anything except your patience.

    The main costs for staking in Peercoin are an investment in the coins and time necessary to participate in the staking process. As a result, Peercoin staking is energy efficient, sustainable, and can even be done on low powered devices like the Raspberry Pi.

    Peercoin has proven over the past decade of continuous operation that the energy wasted to secure Proof-of-Work blockchains is completely unnecessary.

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  • Did Peercoin Really Invent Proof-of-Stake Consensus?

    Yes, the Peercoin blockchain is the very first working implementation of proof-of-stake consensus. Peercoin's founder, Sunny King, designed it as a sustainable alternative to Bitcoin’s proof-of-work.

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  • What is Minting (Staking)?

    Staking, or ‘minting” as we call it in Peercoin, is a fundamental concept that plays a key role in securing the network. This is the original Proof-of-Stake mechanism, and arguably the only true Proof-of-Stake mechanism to this day.

    When you hold peercoins in your wallet, they begin to accumulate "coin age." Coin age is a measure of the amount of time your coins have been held in your wallet and not used for transactions.

    When your coins meet an age of at least 30 days, your wallet is eligible to participate in the staking process. Your wallet competes with others for the opportunity to mint a new block. If your wallet is selected by the protocol, you create a new block, validate transactions, and earn the block reward associated with this new block.

    Minting benefits users by allowing them to 1) directly maintain and secure the blockchain by finding new blocks, 2) earn block rewards and 3) directly participate in the consensus and governance process.

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  • Can Small Coin Holders Participate in Minting?

    Given that the core principle of the original peercoin design is to be the most decentralized blockchain, the minting is direct. There is no middleman between the user and the blockchain (like in DPoS) when it comes to minting. There is no gatekeeping either (like a required minimum balance). It is an open market of coinage and a lottery to be the next to find a block. Anyone can participate, even those holding only one PPC have a chance to find a block. It will always be easier if you own more coins, but the main point is that there are no limitations or requirements to mint except the 30 day wait.

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  • How do I Start Minting with my Peercoin?

    Minting is extremely simple, because the wallet will do everything automatically. The user needs to download the wallet and deposit some coins. After the necessary 30 days of coinage are accumulated, all that is left to do is to occasionally open the wallet in order to allow it to try to find a new block. Leaving your wallet open 24/7 will allow it to mint continuously, earning you a higher annual percentage reward. Mint rewards are around 3% for periodic minters and up to 5% for continuous minters.

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  • Does Peercoin Use Proof-of-Work Mining Also?

    Peercoin actually uses both Proof-of-Stake and Proof-of-Work. Proof-of-Stake is used for security of the network, while Proof-of-Work is only used as a mechanism for continuous distribution of new coins. This continued distribution helps increase decentralization by ensuring that newly created coins end up on the market where outsiders can buy them.

    Essentially, the role of PoW in Peercoin is to create new holders that will mint, rather than placing new inflation only in the hands of existing holders. The PoW in Peercoin is modified from Bitcoin because the block reward automatically decreases as the mining hashrate increases, leading to less inflation over time.

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  • Why is Peercoin One of the Very Few LEGAL Crypto Assets?

    The USA has strict legislation about crypto. Under the laws of the USA - Peercoin is perfectly legal as it had no ICO, no presale, no allocation to team members or founders and no "dev tax" of any sort. Peercoin (just like Bitcoin) distributed its entire supply automatically as block rewards through its consensus protocol (Proof-of-Stake and Proof-of-Work). As a result, Peercoin is NOT a crypto security.

    The vast majority of crypto assets however are unregistered securities due to one or a number of the above listed items that cause them to pass the howey test. The law is very clear on this topic. Given that unregistered securities are at higher risk of being targeted by law enforcement, Peercoin's legal status offers both users and exchanges a sense of safety and peace of mind. It is also an excellent indicator of long-term viability.

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  • What is Something Fun I can do with Peercoin?

    Immutable.place is a collaborative pixel art project (inspired by Reddit Place) hosted on the Peercoin blockchain. Anyone can produce artworks on a 1000x1000 pixel canvas by spending coins to a burn address. Each pixel has 16 addresses that represent 16 colours. Colours that receive the greatest amount to their address are filled in. The resulting artworks are independently reproducible from the blockchain by querying the balance of addresses. Check this tutorial on how to use it, including ways to place pixels faster.

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  • What is the all-time high price of Peercoin (PPC)?

    The all-time high of PPC was 0 USD on 1970-01-01, from which the coin is now down 0%. The all-time high price of Peercoin (PPC) is 0. The current price of PPC is down 0% from its all-time high.

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  • How much Peercoin (PPC) is there in circulation?

    As of , there is currently 29.17M PPC in circulation. PPC has a maximum supply of 0.

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  • What is the market cap of Peercoin (PPC)?

    The current market cap of PPC is 11.51M. It is calculated by multiplying the current supply of PPC by its real-time market price of 0.394671530049.

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  • What is the all-time low price of Peercoin (PPC)?

    The all-time low of PPC was 0 , from which the coin is now up 0%. The all-time low price of Peercoin (PPC) is 0. The current price of PPC is up 0% from its all-time low.

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  • Is Peercoin (PPC) a good investment?

    Peercoin (PPC) has a market capitalization of $11.51M and is ranked #1080 on CoinMarketCap. The cryptocurrency market can be highly volatile, so be sure to do your own research (DYOR) and assess your risk tolerance. Additionally, analyze Peercoin (PPC) price trends and patterns to find the best time to purchase PPC.

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