âWe think weâre the real ethereum.â
In a recent talk at CoinDeskâs developer-only conference Construct, developer Elaine Ou outlined how ethereum classic differs from ethereum, the blockchain that split from its original developers over an ideological disagreement last year.
While ridiculed as a âprotest chainâ for its original commitment to âimmutabilityâ (or the idea that one entity or group shouldnât have the power to change the blockchainâs transaction history), one of the more interesting elements of Ouâs talk was her claim that ethereum classic has been forging ahead by differentiating itself from ethereum in other key technical ways.
Now, the group is moving forward with one pillar of differentiation: monetary policy.
In a statement released on Wednesday, various interest groups supporting ethereum classic announced their support for a proposed monetary policy, or set of rules governing how the protocolâs digital tokens (ETC) are dispersed.
Included are provisions that the total supply of the blockchainâs token will not exceed 230m ETC and a plan to scale down the rewards paid to parties that secure the blockchain.
Notable signatories include IOHK CEO and former ethereum CEO Charles Hoskinson and Barry Silbert, the founder and CEO of investment conglomerate Digital Currency Group (DCG).
The statement reads:
âOur common goal is to make Ethereum Classic a success. We believe that the community can unite and work together to achieve a sustainable global platform.â
As such, the news might mark a significant step in the projectâs ideation.
To date, ethereum classicâs defining feature has been its focus on immutability. In fact, this is the ideological difference that led to the blockchain split between ethereum classic and ethereum, which reverted transactions after a major hack of The DAO project last year.
But the two protocols are still very much the same. The code issued on ethereum classic after the split has remained in step with the ethereum project, as the classic team has been copying over many of ethereumâs code changes.
With the news on monetary policy, ethereum classic is taking a nibble at legitimacy. Up until the split, many developers anticipated that in the case of a hard fork â merely a hypothetical up until The DAO event â a minority chain like ethereum classic would die out.
In this way, ethereum classic places itself as an aspiring project in the context of a long chain of cryptocurrencies that have failed to fulfill promises made by their founders, yet simultaneously impassioned their supporters.
To those observing the space, though, the announcement is hardly surprising.
âEthereumâs current monetary policy â well, it doesnât have a monetary policy,â Ou acknowledged in her overview presentation at Construct in January.
The communityâs plan to âfixâ this problem has been outlined in an official proposal, known as ECIP 1017, the proposal that the protocolâs various stakeholders officially announced their support for on Wednesday.
âWe wanted to modify the monetary policy so it looks more like bitcoinâs hard limit of about 200m ether. Every two-and-a-half years or so, the block reward will be reduced by about 20%,â Ou explained.
But, whatâs the big deal about monetary policy?
To ethereum classicâs anonymous project coordinator, Arvicco, itâs an attribute that will facilitate further development and growth.
âThe undefined monetary policy of ethereum, its unlimited token inflation, is an impediment to all positive developments,â he said. âMoving to a bitcoin-like fixed cap emission schedule was considered a priority by many ETC stakeholders.â
One of the best examples of ethereum classicâs upward progress, and continued controversy, is that investment company DCG proposed an investment fund that would support ethereum classic projects.
Yet, the monetary policy is so important, DCG founder and CEOÂ Barry Silbert has said, that it doesnât intend to launch the fund until the plan is finalized.
âWhen something is clearly known and defined, it makes it much easier for investors, miners, developers and other community members to plan around,â said IOHK project lead Carlo Vicari.
Ethereum classic arguably took its first step on this path when it carried out a hard fork to postpone the so-called difficulty bomb thatâs built into the ethereum codebase (meant to encourage migration to another consensus mechanism).
But, isnât changing the monetary policy a fundamental change to the protocol? Some would argue so, as it requires another hard fork.
Ethereum classic has become the poster child for what can happen when a protocol forks â and its actions now could go a long way to establishin precedent for other contentious chains.
It might show what could happen if ethereum classic itself executes a contentious fork. Although, so far, the cryptocurrency has carried out two others without spawning something like âethereum classic classicâ.
Monetary policy is perhaps the highest priority change according to the community, but there are others in the works as well.
IOHK, a company thatâs been particularly active in the space, has been one of the biggest players so far.
Perhaps most notably given the major resource commitment, IOHK is funding seven full-time developers to work on a Scala implementation of the ethereum classic protocol, expected for beta release this summer.
The cryptocurrency now has two teams working on ethereum classic clients â implementations of the protocol users can run.
Beyond that, IOHKÂ is treating the relatively new cryptocurrency like a research laboratory.
âWe want to see if we can create a divergent roadmap and see where we can go with it, to see how successful a different model would be from what [ethereum creator Vitalik Buterin]Â has planned with the Ethereum Foundation,â Hoskinson said.
He pointed out plans to use a different consensus algorithm (a hybrid of âproof of workâ and âproof of stakeâ) and decentralized governance as options.
Hoskinson told CoinDesk:
âOne of the biggest contentions in the debate between ethereum and ethereum classic is basically who gets to control the system. With ethereum, thatâs the Ethereum Foundation. They control the money, they have the developers and they have the crowdsale mandate.â
Notably, Hoskinson was the former CEO of Ethereum (back before it was a non-profit even), but left over a difference in opinion about how ethereum should be structured.
But, though no one has control of ethereum classic, according to Hoskinson, he thinks there needs to be some better governance mechanism for coordinating future forks and distributing funds to developers.
One proposal that the company is working on is for a âtreasuryâ that funds developers, but isnât managed by any one institution.
The proposal isnât yet complete, but the idea is for a development âtaxâ thatâs built into the protocol. Essentially, while miners get a block reward for discovering new blocks, a percentage of each block reward will be sent to the so-called treasury to dole out to developers or projects the community chooses to vote for.
Hoskinson compared the structure to a traditional government that taxes participants for the common good. Although some participants might be wary of a tax, he argued that mining rewards are a kind of tax and that itâs possible that development could be funded in the same way.
Despite these developments, ethereum classic is a small community. One criticism often leveled at the classic blockchain is that, unlike ethereum, not many decentralized apps (or dapps) are built on top of it yet.
In Hoskinsonâs opinion, this is a good thing. Before smart contracts are deployed, he said, researchers and developers need to further vet their security and lay the groundwork at the protocol level.
Others, though, think that work on ethereum classic dapps could pick up sooner rather than later.
âI expect that after monetary policy is set and other foundational pieces come into place, the focus for some in the community will shift to dapp development,â Vicari said.
Ou mentioned that there are still many other major open questions around big technical upgrades, such as âshardingâ. Arguably, the Ethereum Foundation hasnât delivered on its promises here, and Ou claims that ethereum classic might go a different route.
Still, even with all this recent discussion, ethereum classic was originally born out of a commitment to immutability, and that simple goal may continue to be what motivates the community.
Ou concluded:
âRight now, ETCâs main feature is that we favor immutability. I know that some people donât care about that â maybe they donât need a blockchain at all.â
Disclosure: CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group.
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