Business Standard

Bitcoin competitor­s are being built in ex-Google coders’ laptops

- CAMILA RUSSO

Bitcoin’s seemingly unstoppabl­e surge to record highs isn’t deterring competitor­s.

Former Silicon Valley developers are working on at least two new versions of the digital currency. Basecoin is seeking to solve bitcoin’s volatility with a team of former Google coders that are building what they hope will be a more stable version of the cryptocurr­ency. Cypherium has former Google, Amazon and Microsoft developers building a blockchain that aims to be able to handle an expanded workload more easily.

Competitio­n isn’t new for bitcoin as there are over 1,000 different blockchain­s, the technology used for verifying and recording transactio­ns that’s at the heart of bitcoin. While many rivals such as ethereum also provide applicatio­ns, others like zCash and monero already say they’re trying to improve upon the first and biggest cryptocurr­ency.

So far they haven’t succeeded in dethroning bitcoin. After briefly dipping below 50 per cent of the total cryptocurr­ency market, bitcoin is back at its dominant position.

“When you have a whole new industry, competitor­s within that industry aren’t really competing with each other, they’re competing with the old industry and generally all boats rise together,” said Peter Van Valkenburg­h, research director at Coin Center.

Basecoin’s investors include venture-capital firms Andreessen Horowitz, PolyChain Capital, Pantera Capital and Mark Cubanbacke­d 1confirmat­ion, among others. The team aims to develop a central bank that’s based on algorithms, performing similar money supply regulation functions done by the Federal Reserve, except it’s on the blockchain, requiring no human discretion. The hope is to have a stable currency that will make commerce more viable than can be conducted given bitcoin’s wild price swings.

In the Cypherium blockchain, developers write smart contracts and do governance work off-chain, so that all the power can be dedicated to transactio­ns. The aim is for the cryptocurr­ency to handle thousands of transactio­ns per second, compared with bitcoin’s fewer than 10.

Newcomers will have a lot of catching up to do, as bitcoin continues to break new records, now towering above $5,000, as it shrugs off splits on its blockchain that stem from disagreeme­nts on fixing the very problems these new cryptocurr­encies say they solve.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India