Despite launching with considerable fanfare in early 2019, grin, the first cryptocurrency to test privacy protocol MimbleWimble, is showing no signs of life.Â
At its launch, professional investors poured funding â by some estimates, $100 million â into mining the cryptocurrency, with some even calling it a sort of âBitcoin 2.0â.Â
Privacy without sacrificing scalability is the primary advantage of MimbleWimble, according to grin developers. The first grin coins were also issued via a so-called âfair launchâ whereby, similar to bitcoin, all coins are minted by miners instead of being generated prior to the network going live.Â
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âGrin was probably the most crowded venture capital trade of 2019,â said Ryan Gentry, lead analyst at Multicoin Capital.
On-chain data suggests once-eager investors soured on the young cryptocurrency. Grinâs hash power, a measure of computing resources devoted to securing the network, and mining difficulty, which gauges the amount of power required to mine, started to collapse in August 2019. After nine consecutive months of decline, the trend shows no sign of reversing.
Grinâs planned hard forks, or systemwide upgrades, could also be responsible for its declining network activity. Every six months, the network executes these upgrades that change grinâs mining algorithm to deter expensive, specialized mining equipment from dominating its hash power.Â
After the first fork, grinâs hashrate and difficulty climbed, but the second fork coincided with the steepest hashrate decline in the networkâs short history. Grin is preparing for yet another drop in hashrate after a third next fork scheduled for July.Â
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Even grinâs transaction count, a metric that could be easily manipulated to mask the networkâs declining use, has dropped roughly 20% year to date, according to Coin Metrics. This smaller drop follows a more than 70% decrease in daily transactions through February and March 2019.Â
Grin developers say the cryptocurrency isnât designed to cater to short-term speculative investors.
âCryptocurrency is mostly a speculation game,â said grin developer John Tromp. âGrin is hurt in the short term by being speculation-unfriendly.â
Adding to grinâs woes, San Francisco-based Dragonfly Capital published research six months ago describing an âattackâ that could reveal the identities of 96% of active grin users.
To date, the grin team has not fixed the vulnerability.
Ivan Bogatyy, who wrote the report, said grinâs core developers are âamong the strongest engineers in the space.â However, they âfaced a very hard cold-start problem with incumbentsâ such as monero (XMR) and zcash (ZEC) due to grinâs lack of âa robust privacy mechanismâ to challenge leading privacy cryptocurrencies.
According to the people behind grin, Bogatyyâs report contains âmany logical leapsâ and the anonymity exploit is a known and âwell-documentedâ problem.
Traders also seemed to have lost interest in grin. Since last June, the privacy currencyâs price â quoted in dollars and bitcoin â has only dropped.Â
When it first launched, for example, New York City-based crypto fund Iterative Capital briefly supported grin on its over-the-counter trading desk and considered mining. But it didnât take long for the firm to lose interest.
âBuying demand was so low and the technology was in such an incipient form that we quickly stopped bothering,â said Iterative Capitalâs founder and managing partner Chris Dannen.
Grin launched during an âaltcoin bear market,â said grin developer David Burkett. That the price has âso far only moved downwardâ is a âvery similar movement to many coins launched at the same time.â
Every new cryptocurrency struggles to gain adoption early on. But for the privacy currency that promised to be the next big thing, replacing speculators with real users has proven to be an uphill battle.