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Wikipedia

Namecoin

Namecoin (Abbreviation: NMC; sign: ) is a cryptocurrency originally forked from bitcoin software. It uses proof-of-work algorithm. Like bitcoin, it is limited to 21 million coins.[5]

Namecoin
Denominations
Pluralnamecoins
Symbol[citation needed]
CodeNMC
Subunits
11000millinamecoin
11000000micronamecoin
1100000000swartz
Development
Original author(s)Vincent Durham
Initial release18 April 2011 (13 years ago) (2011-04-18)[1]
Latest release0.21.0[2] / 29 January 2021 (3 years ago) (2021-01-29)
Code repositoryhttps://github.com/namecoin/namecoin-core
Development statusActive
Project fork ofBitcoin
Ledger
Ledger start17 April 2011 (13 years ago) (2011-04-17)[3]
Timestamping schemeProof-of-work (merged mining)[4]
Hash functionSHA-256
Block time10 minutes[5]
Block explorerbitinfocharts.com/namecoin/explorer/

chainz.cryptoid.info/nmc/

nmc.tokenview.com
Supply limit21,000,000[5]
Website
Websitewww.namecoin.org

Namecoin can store data within its own blockchain transaction database. The original proposal for Namecoin called for Namecoin to insert data into bitcoin's blockchain directly. Anticipating scaling difficulties with this approach, a shared proof-of-work system was proposed to secure new cryptocurrencies with different use cases.

Namecoin's flagship use case is the censorship-resistant top level domain .bit, which is functionally similar to .com or .net domains but is independent of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, the main governing body for domain names.[6] In practice, the top level domain is used by a handful of functional websites. As of 2019, OpenNIC no longer supports the .bit domain.

Transactions

A peer-to-peer network similar to handles Namecoin's transactions, balances and issuance through a based proof-of-work scheme (they are issued when a small enough hash value is found, at which point a block is created).[7]

Records

Each Namecoin record consists of a name and a value. Each name is actually a path, with the namespace preceding the name of the record. The key d/example signifies a record stored in the DNS namespace d with the name example and corresponds to the record for the example.bit website. The content of d/example is expected to conform to the DNS namespace specification. As of 2015, the fee for a record was 0.01 NMC and records expired after 36000 blocks (~200 days) unless updated or renewed.[7]

Uses

.bit is a top-level domain, created outside the commonly used Domain Name System, and is not sanctioned by ICANN. The .bit domain is served via Namecoin infrastructure, which acts as a decentralized domain name system.[7]

Proposed potential uses for Namecoin besides domain name registration include notary/timestamp systems.[8]

History

In September 2010, a discussion was started[by whom?] in the BitcoinTalk forum about a hypothetical system called BitDNS and generalizing bitcoin. Gavin Andresen and Satoshi Nakamoto joined the discussion in the BitcoinTalk forum and supported the idea of BitDNS, and a reward for implementing BitDNS was announced on the forum in December 2010.[citation needed]

On block 19200 Namecoin activated the merged mining upgrade to allow mining of Bitcoin and Namecoin simultaneously, instead of having to choose between one or the other; this fixed the issue of miners jumping from one blockchain to another when the profitability becomes favorable in the former.[4]

Two years later, in June 2013, NameID was launched.[9] NameID allows to associate profile information with identities on the Namecoin blockchain, and an OpenID provider to allow logging into existing websites with Namecoin identities. The main site itself is accompanied by an open protocol for password-less authentication with Namecoin identities, a corresponding free-software implementation and a supporting extension for Firefox.[citation needed]

In October 2013, Michael Gronager, main developer of libcoin, found a security issue in the Namecoin protocol, which allowed modifying foreign names. It was successfully fixed in a short timeframe and was never exploited, except for bitcoin.bit as a proof-of-concept.[10][citation needed]

Namecoin was also mentioned by ICANN in a public report as the most well-known example of distributing control and privacy in DNS.[11]

A 2015 study found that of the 120,000 domain names registered on Namecoin, only 28 were in use.[7]

In December 2018, a proposal was tabled on the OpenNIC mailing list to drop support for Namecoin .bit domains.,[12] citing Spamhaus' (and by extension other antivirus software) blocking of several of their servers owing to spread of malware from some .bit domains, as well as concerns about potential child pornography. The vote did not reach a consensus.[13]

In the same month, OpenNIC was advised to drop support for .bit namespace owing to security concerns of Namecoin and PRISM Break developers.[14]

In July 2019, OpenNIC again voted on dropping the .bit namespace, citing "numerous problems with support of NameCoin domains" and recent animosity between the two projects. The vote passed.[15] Namecoin developer Jeremy Rand welcomed the move, thanking OpenNIC and describing it as the "right decision".[16][17][18]

See also

References

  1. ^ "[announce] Namecoin - a distributed naming system based on Bitcoin". bitcointalk.org.
  2. ^ "Releases - namecoin/namecoin-core" – via GitHub.
  3. ^ "Block #0". namebrow.se.
  4. ^ a b "Merged Mining: Analysis of Effects and Implications". repositum.tuwien.ac.at. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
  5. ^ a b c Loibl, Andreas (2014-08-01). "Namecoin" (PDF).
  6. ^ Dourado, Eli (2014-02-05). "Can Namecoin Obsolete ICANN (and More)?". Theumlaut.
  7. ^ a b c d Kalodner, Harry; Carlsten, Miles; Ellenbogen, Paul; Bonneau, Joseph; Narayanan, Arvind (2015). "An empirical study of Namecoin and lessons for decentralized namespace design" (PDF). Workshop on the Economics of Information Security. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.698.4605.
  8. ^ Kirk, Jeremy (2013-05-24). . Techworld. Archived from the original on 2014-10-12. Retrieved 2013-07-02.
  9. ^ Kraft, Daniel (2013-07-25). "NameID - Use namecoin id/ to log into OpenID sites". Namecoin Forum.
  10. ^ bitcoin.bit name operation is in tx-id 2f034f2499c136a2c5a922ca4be65c1292815c753bbb100a2a26d5ad532c3919
  11. ^ "The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Identifier Technology Innovation Report" (PDF). ICANN. 2014-05-15. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  12. ^ "Should we have a vote on .bit ?". opennic-discuss.
  13. ^ "Vote to keep or drop peering with NameCoin". opennic-discuss.
  14. ^ "Drop OpenNIC (!2073) · Merge Requests · PRISM Break / PRISM Break". GitLab. 19 December 2018. Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  15. ^ "Should OpenNIC drop support for NameCoin [OpenNIC Wiki]". wiki.opennic.org. Retrieved 2021-01-23.
  16. ^ "OpenNIC does the right thing: listens to security concerns and shuts down its centralized Namecoin inproxy". namecoin.org.
  17. ^ "Namecoin : l'intégrité, mais à quel prix?". ZDNet France (in French). 2019-08-01. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  18. ^ "What is Namecoin's relationship to OpenNIC?". namecoin.org.

Further reading

  • Judmayer, Aljosha; Stifter, Nicholas; Krombholz, Katharina; Weippl, Edgar (2022) [2017]. Blocks and Chains: Introduction to Bitcoin, Cryptocurrencies, and Their Consensus Mechanisms. Cham: Springer Nature. pp. 47–49. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-02352-1. ISBN 978-3-031-01224-2. ISSN 1945-9742. S2CID 249533342. Retrieved 2022-06-25 – via Google Books.
  • Haferkorn, Martin; Quintana Diaz, Josué Manual (2015). "Seasonality and Interconnectivity Within Cryptocurrencies – An Analysis on the Basis of Bitcoin, Litecoin and Namecoin". In Lugmayr, Artur (ed.). Enterprise Applications and Services in the Finance Industry: 7th International Workshop, FinanceCom 2014, Sydney, Australia, December 2014, Revised Papers. Cham: Springer Nature. p. 110. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-28151-3. ISBN 978-3-319-28150-6. ISSN 1865-1348. S2CID 37289572. Retrieved 2022-06-25 – via Google Books.
  • Karame, Ghassan; Androulaki, Elli (2016). Bitcoin and Blockchain Security. Boston: Artech House. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-63081-013-9. Retrieved 2022-06-25 – via Google Books.
  • Bheemaiah, Kariappa (2017). The Blockchain Alternative: Rethinking Macroeconomic Policy and Economic Theory. New York: Apress. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-4842-2673-5. Retrieved 2022-06-25 – via Google Books.
  • Franco, Pedro (2015). Understanding Bitcoin: Cryptography, Engineering and Economics. West Sussex: Wiley. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-119-01914-5. Retrieved 2022-06-25 – via Google Books.
  • Kirillova, Elena Anatolyevna; Pavlyuk, Albert Valentinovich; Mikhaylova, Irina Aleksandrovna; Zulfugarzade, Teymur E.; Zenin, Sergey S. (2018). . Journal of Advanced Research in Law and Economics. 9 (31): 119. doi:10.14505//jarle.v9.1(31).16. S2CID 169842085. Archived from the original on 2022-06-25. Retrieved 2022-06-25 – via Central and Eastern European Online Library.
  • Chang, Tao-Hung; Svetinovic, Davor (2016). "Data Analysis of Digital Currency Networks: Namecoin Case Study". . Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. pp. 122–125. doi:10.1109/ICECCS.2016.023. ISBN 978-1-5090-5526-5. S2CID 9397221. Archived from the original on 2022-06-25. Retrieved 2022-06-25.
  • External links

    • Official website

    namecoin, this, article, rely, excessively, sources, closely, associated, with, subject, potentially, preventing, article, from, being, verifiable, neutral, please, help, improve, replacing, them, with, more, appropriate, citations, reliable, independent, thir. This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Namecoin Abbreviation NMC sign N displaystyle mathbb N is a cryptocurrency originally forked from bitcoin software It uses proof of work algorithm Like bitcoin it is limited to 21 million coins 5 NamecoinDenominationsPluralnamecoinsSymbolN displaystyle mathbb N citation needed CodeNMCSubunits 1 1000millinamecoin 1 1000000micronamecoin 1 100000000swartzDevelopmentOriginal author s Vincent DurhamInitial release18 April 2011 13 years ago 2011 04 18 1 Latest release0 21 0 2 29 January 2021 3 years ago 2021 01 29 Code repositoryhttps github com namecoin namecoin coreDevelopment statusActiveProject fork ofBitcoinLedgerLedger start17 April 2011 13 years ago 2011 04 17 3 Timestamping schemeProof of work merged mining 4 Hash functionSHA 256Block time10 minutes 5 Block explorerbitinfocharts wbr com wbr namecoin wbr explorer wbr chainz wbr cryptoid wbr info wbr nmc wbr nmc wbr tokenview wbr comSupply limitN displaystyle mathbb N 21 000 000 5 WebsiteWebsitewww namecoin org Namecoin can store data within its own blockchain transaction database The original proposal for Namecoin called for Namecoin to insert data into bitcoin s blockchain directly Anticipating scaling difficulties with this approach a shared proof of work system was proposed to secure new cryptocurrencies with different use cases Namecoin s flagship use case is the censorship resistant top level domain bit which is functionally similar to a href com html title com com a or a href net html title net net a domains but is independent of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers the main governing body for domain names 6 In practice the top level domain is used by a handful of functional websites As of 2019 OpenNIC no longer supports the bit domain Contents 1 Transactions 1 1 Records 2 Uses 3 History 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksTransactionsA peer to peer network similar to handles Namecoin s transactions balances and issuance through a based proof of work scheme they are issued when a small enough hash value is found at which point a block is created 7 Records Each Namecoin record consists of a name and a value Each name is actually a path with the namespace preceding the name of the record The key d example signifies a record stored in the DNS namespace d with the name example and corresponds to the record for the example bit website The content of d example is expected to conform to the DNS namespace specification As of 2015 update the fee for a record was 0 01 NMC and records expired after 36000 blocks 200 days unless updated or renewed 7 Uses bit is a top level domain created outside the commonly used Domain Name System and is not sanctioned by ICANN The bit domain is served via Namecoin infrastructure which acts as a decentralized domain name system 7 Proposed potential uses for Namecoin besides domain name registration include notary timestamp systems 8 HistoryIn September 2010 a discussion was started by whom in the BitcoinTalk forum about a hypothetical system called BitDNS and generalizing bitcoin Gavin Andresen and Satoshi Nakamoto joined the discussion in the BitcoinTalk forum and supported the idea of BitDNS and a reward for implementing BitDNS was announced on the forum in December 2010 citation needed On block 19200 Namecoin activated the merged mining upgrade to allow mining of Bitcoin and Namecoin simultaneously instead of having to choose between one or the other this fixed the issue of miners jumping from one blockchain to another when the profitability becomes favorable in the former 4 Two years later in June 2013 NameID was launched 9 NameID allows to associate profile information with identities on the Namecoin blockchain and an OpenID provider to allow logging into existing websites with Namecoin identities The main site itself is accompanied by an open protocol for password less authentication with Namecoin identities a corresponding free software implementation and a supporting extension for Firefox citation needed In October 2013 Michael Gronager main developer of libcoin found a security issue in the Namecoin protocol which allowed modifying foreign names It was successfully fixed in a short timeframe and was never exploited except for bitcoin bit as a proof of concept 10 citation needed Namecoin was also mentioned by ICANN in a public report as the most well known example of distributing control and privacy in DNS 11 A 2015 study found that of the 120 000 domain names registered on Namecoin only 28 were in use 7 In December 2018 a proposal was tabled on the OpenNIC mailing list to drop support for Namecoin bit domains 12 citing Spamhaus and by extension other antivirus software blocking of several of their servers owing to spread of malware from some bit domains as well as concerns about potential child pornography The vote did not reach a consensus 13 In the same month OpenNIC was advised to drop support for bit namespace owing to security concerns of Namecoin and PRISM Break developers 14 In July 2019 OpenNIC again voted on dropping the bit namespace citing numerous problems with support of NameCoin domains and recent animosity between the two projects The vote passed 15 Namecoin developer Jeremy Rand welcomed the move thanking OpenNIC and describing it as the right decision 16 17 18 See alsoAlternative DNS root Zooko s triangle Non fungible token a concept which Namecoin is sometimes considered a precursor of References announce Namecoin a distributed naming system based on Bitcoin bitcointalk org Releases namecoin namecoin core via GitHub Block 0 namebrow se a b Merged Mining Analysis of Effects and Implications repositum tuwien ac at Retrieved 2018 12 24 a b c Loibl Andreas 2014 08 01 Namecoin PDF Dourado Eli 2014 02 05 Can Namecoin Obsolete ICANN and More Theumlaut a b c d Kalodner Harry Carlsten Miles Ellenbogen Paul Bonneau Joseph Narayanan Arvind 2015 An empirical study of Namecoin and lessons for decentralized namespace design PDF Workshop on the Economics of Information Security CiteSeerX 10 1 1 698 4605 Kirk Jeremy 2013 05 24 Could the Bitcoin network be used as an ultrasecure notary service Techworld Archived from the original on 2014 10 12 Retrieved 2013 07 02 Kraft Daniel 2013 07 25 NameID Use namecoin id to log into OpenID sites Namecoin Forum bitcoin bit name operation is in tx id 2f034f2499c136a2c5a922ca4be65c1292815c753bbb100a2a26d5ad532c3919 The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Identifier Technology Innovation Report PDF ICANN 2014 05 15 Retrieved 2021 10 17 Should we have a vote on bit opennic discuss Vote to keep or drop peering with NameCoin opennic discuss Drop OpenNIC 2073 Merge Requests PRISM Break PRISM Break GitLab 19 December 2018 Retrieved 2021 01 23 Should OpenNIC drop support for NameCoin OpenNIC Wiki wiki opennic org Retrieved 2021 01 23 OpenNIC does the right thing listens to security concerns and shuts down its centralized Namecoin inproxy namecoin org Namecoin l integrite mais a quel prix ZDNet France in French 2019 08 01 Retrieved 2021 11 27 What is Namecoin s relationship to OpenNIC namecoin org Further readingJudmayer Aljosha Stifter Nicholas Krombholz Katharina Weippl Edgar 2022 2017 Blocks and Chains Introduction to Bitcoin Cryptocurrencies and Their Consensus Mechanisms Cham Springer Nature pp 47 49 doi 10 1007 978 3 031 02352 1 ISBN 978 3 031 01224 2 ISSN 1945 9742 S2CID 249533342 Retrieved 2022 06 25 via Google Books Haferkorn Martin Quintana Diaz Josue Manual 2015 Seasonality and Interconnectivity Within Cryptocurrencies An Analysis on the Basis of Bitcoin Litecoin and Namecoin In Lugmayr Artur ed Enterprise Applications and Services in the Finance Industry 7th International Workshop FinanceCom 2014 Sydney Australia December 2014 Revised Papers Cham Springer Nature p 110 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 28151 3 ISBN 978 3 319 28150 6 ISSN 1865 1348 S2CID 37289572 Retrieved 2022 06 25 via Google Books Karame Ghassan Androulaki Elli 2016 Bitcoin and Blockchain Security Boston Artech House p 165 ISBN 978 1 63081 013 9 Retrieved 2022 06 25 via Google Books Bheemaiah Kariappa 2017 The Blockchain Alternative Rethinking Macroeconomic Policy and Economic Theory New York Apress p 77 ISBN 978 1 4842 2673 5 Retrieved 2022 06 25 via Google Books Franco Pedro 2015 Understanding Bitcoin Cryptography Engineering and Economics West Sussex Wiley p 174 ISBN 978 1 119 01914 5 Retrieved 2022 06 25 via Google Books Kirillova Elena Anatolyevna Pavlyuk Albert Valentinovich Mikhaylova Irina Aleksandrovna Zulfugarzade Teymur E Zenin Sergey S 2018 Bitcoin Lifecoin Namecoin The Legal Nature of Virtual Currency Journal of Advanced Research in Law and Economics 9 31 119 doi 10 14505 jarle v9 1 31 16 S2CID 169842085 Archived from the original on 2022 06 25 Retrieved 2022 06 25 via Central and Eastern European Online Library Chang Tao Hung Svetinovic Davor 2016 Data Analysis of Digital Currency Networks Namecoin Case Study 2016 21st International Conference on Engineering of Complex Computer Systems ICECCS Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers pp 122 125 doi 10 1109 ICECCS 2016 023 ISBN 978 1 5090 5526 5 S2CID 9397221 Archived from the original on 2022 06 25 Retrieved 2022 06 25 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Namecoin Official website Portals nbsp Anarchism nbsp Economics nbsp Free and open source software nbsp Internet nbsp Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Namecoin amp oldid 1216772255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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