Charles Lee isnât nearly as invisible as Satoshi Nakamoto, but heâs doing his best. The creator of Litecoin, the second most successful cryptocurrency after Bitcoin, was happy to speak with CoinDesk, but he didnât want to reveal too much about himself. What we know for sure about the California-based software engineer is that he graduated from a leading technology-focused university in 1999, and is currently working for an Internet software company. CoinDesk knows who that is â and the odd reference can be found online by those who know where to look â but Lee really doesnât like to talk about it.
The six-person team behind the altcoin is equally secretive. âThey are people that I talked to over the years on IRC and other forums,â Lee says of the team, which communicates with the broader community through chat rooms and message boards. âSome of them donât want their identities known.â
âPeople are always afraid of government intervention,â he says. âCryptocurrency is such a powerful concept that it can almost overturn governments.â
Lee heard about Bitcoin two years ago, and almost immediately understood the significance of the idea. âI definitely think that what the Internet did to information, cryptocurrency will do to currency,â he says. Like many digital coin enthusiasts, he started mining bitcoin before getting into the altcoin scene.
First flirtations with altcoins
Around that time, an altcoin called IXcoin was launched. Still more appeared, and Lee decided to get in on the act, creating Fairbrix in September 2011.
Fairbrix was a clone of Tenebrix, an altcurrency created in 2011, but its launch was mismanaged. âThe developer of the coin mined the coin, created seven million coins for himself and then launched it,â says Lee, arguing that a lot of people were wary of supporting it. âSo there was community interest in creating a clone coin to make it more fair by having zero pre-mined.â
Fairbrix was Leeâs first flirtation with Scrypt as a proof of work function. Unlike Bitcoinâs SHA-256 function, Scrypt is designed to be CPU-friendly, making it more difficult for ASIC miners to control the network, and letting people who canât afford expensive specialist hardware in on the act. Unfortunately, Fairbrix was a failure.
Part of the problem was a software bug. The client that Fairbrix used, called Multicoin, supported multiple coins. The bug stopped many of the initial Fairbrix blocks from producing coins. âBecause of that, and also because it was 51% attacked from the start, the coin didnât have a fair launch and it failed from there,â Lee recalls. These attacks are relatively easy to launch early on in a coinâs life, because there are often not enough miners to protect the network against control.
His next attempt at an altcoin was a success. He launched Litecoin in October 2011, combining code from the bitcoin client to eliminate the bug that helped to kill Fairbrix. There were some key differences to Bitcoin, however. Instead of having a maximum of 21 million coins, Litecoin had 84 million. It also incorporated the Scrypt proof of work from Tenebrix, designed to make mining more democratic.
Fair and transparent
Fairness is a frequent theme in Leeâs discussions about cryptocurrencies (which isnât surprising, given the name of his first attempt). Proof of work algorithms play into this. âWhen bitcoin started, it was fair,â he says, because people could mine it profitably with CPUs. Then, as GPUs emerged, this became more difficult. âWhen Litecoin was launched it was CPU only. Then a year later, someone figured out that they can use GPUs to mine it also. Thatâs the current state,â he says, adding that he expects to see it move to ASICs in time. âCurrently, some think that Litecoin is more fair because thereâs no Litecoin ASIC but it may just be a matter of time,â he warns.
âFor Bitcoin, the ASIC machines blow away the GPUs in terms of efficiency. But for Litecoin, the Scrypt algorithm wonât see as drastic a difference. You will eventually see it happen, though.â
It was his new approach to launching Litecoin, rather than the technology behind it, that made it less susceptible to 51% attacks. He launched the source code a week before announcing the genesis block that would begin delivering Litecoins to miners. During that week, he encouraged people to mine on Testnet (effectively a testing ground for altcoins, which doesnât generate any rewards, or add blocks to a live chain).
âBecause of that, a bunch of people built up hype around the coin, talked about how itâs fair, and based around bitcoin, had four times the coins, was a lot faster, and used Scrypt,â he said By the time he set up the genesis block, the hash rate was strong enough to make a 51% attack much harder.
A complementary relationship
Lee considers his relationship with the Bitcoin development team to be healthy. âWe do talk every now and then to exchange ideas and help each other out. Weâre on fairly good terms,â he says. However, culturally speaking, his altcoin has one significant advantage over Bitcoin.
âThe bitcoin market is worth $2bn, so they donât want to make any big changes that could lose them a lot of money. We are able to take more risk. Our community is smaller, so itâs easier for us to convince a large proportion of people to upgrade.â Itâs harder for Bitcoin miners to do that, he points out.
âThere are a lot of things that require a hard fork and Bitcoin is wary of that,â he explains. Consequently, the Bitcoin developers sometimes talk to the Litecoin team to see if it will consider an experimental feature for its altcoin, if they are unwilling to take the risk.
There are interesting features such as Zerocoin that could be added to the core Litecoin protocol, he says, but another often-lauded feature, coloured coins, isnât on his immediate agenda.
Marking coins mathematically so that they can be used as tokens for other things such as physical property and stocks is an interesting concept, he admits. âBut right now, itâs a bit too technical for the average person. Using bitcoin and litecoin to buy stuff online is complex enough,â he argues. âAdding coloured coins on top of that totally confuses people.â
In any case, there are other, more pressing features. The Litecoin team is presently considering smarter transaction fees. âFees are pretty static right now,â Lee says. Earlier this year, it adjusted its minimum fee from .1 LTC to .02 LTC, partly in response to the growing value of the coin. But he thinks that the transaction fees should vary with the value of the transaction. âWeâre thinking about ways to make it smart, where the fees would reduce automatically,â he says. âThat would be beneficial for merchants.â
Getting merchants on board
Merchant adoption is a holy grail for most altcoins. Until merchants begin using a coin ubiquitously, itâs hard to get it out of the speculation phase and into a cycle where it is consistently and widely circulated, with the liquidity benefits that this brings. Merchant adoption is directly linked to volatility â the more merchants that take a coin, the more it is spent. The more it is spent (and the more liquidity it has), the less volatile the pricing will be.
âThe nice thing about us is that weâre very similar to bitcoin, so if merchants accept coins for merchandise, it will also be easy for them to accept litecoins,â he suggests. Heâs happy to ride Satoshiâs coattails in the meantime.
âLitecoin is two years behind bitcoin in terms of our adoption, so itâs interesting to look into the future,â he says. âIf we donât screw it up, litecoin will follow on the coattails of bitcoin. There will be more merchant adoption, and it will become less speculative and more useful.â
One possibility is that bitcoin will be used for more expensive purchases, whereas litecoin will take up the microtransaction space, he suggests (which also explains his focus on variable transaction fees).
But before any of this can succeed, one of the critical features that litecoin needs is a good payment processor, he admits. âI have talked to a few groups of people that are working on litecoin payment processors.â Kojn (formerly LitePay) is one. There are other potential developments, too.
One big boost for Litecoin will be official support from Mt. Gox, which in spite of its recent travails is still the biggest altcoin exchange. In June, the exchange promised that it would explore Litecoin adoption for July, but itâs running out of time. In any case, this doesnât mean that Lee is a fan of Mt. Gox. âHaving one exchange thatâs dominating everyone is bad for bitcoin, so I am not upset that Mt. Gox is losing its mojo,â he says. âLitecoin is becoming more popular and Mt. Gox has seen that theyâre missing out on making money from litecoin, and thatâs why they want to implement it.â Vircurex and BTC-E are among the exchanges that support Litecoin.
Those are some of his hopes for Litecoin. What are his fears? âThereâs always a chance that I could screw up the code and cause major problems,â he says. Given his experience with software bugs and Fairbrix, he cracks this joke with an air of unease.
After all, the bug that brings his coin down need not come from him. âThere was a bug in the Berkeley database that Bitcoin was using, and that Litecoin is using right now, and that bug makes it possible for the same client to hard fork,â he says. âItâs extremely unlikely but thereâs a possibility, and if it happens it would be impossible for us to combine the two forks. Thatâs one of the major fears.â
This doesnât keep him up at night, however. Nothing does, he says. Lee is working with his community and doing his best. At a market cap of 617540 bitcoins (at the time of writing) â second only to bitcoin itself â the dev team and the community that supports it seem to be doing rather a good job.
Image credit: cybrbeast