Li₿ΞʁLiøη 🏴a³ on Nostr: Monero was created in 2014 as a fork of a project called “Bytecoin” by a small ...
Monero was created in 2014 as a fork of a project called “Bytecoin” by a small community of developers.
Monero is not a fork of Bitcoin, and uses an entirely new codebase called “Cryptonote” that has evolved into the Monero protocol.
Monero was started with three core aims – privacy that is usable and approachable for the masses, by default, a scalable and iterating base-layer, and ASIC-resistance to enable commodity hardware mining which aids decentralization.
Monero enables this default privacy for all users of the network through a variety of means:
—RingCT: this technology hides all amounts sent and received on-chain (via Confidential Transactions), as well as hides which output is actually being spent among (currently) 10 others (via ring signatures). This requires no coordination and is completely non-interactive (unlike CoinJoin) and happens entirely via the protocol itself.
—Stealth addresses: this technology hides sender and receiver addresses on-chain by letting the sender generate a one-time address using the receiver’s public key, so no actual addresses are ever published to the blockchain.
—Dandelion++: This technology helps to hide the sender’s IP address when sending Monero by using a special method of relaying transactions to other nodes.
Published at
2023-09-25 22:24:06Event JSON
{
"id": "97d179333fba124fc54784895b7085ec52d86d832810760ec3517ddcd47f7162",
"pubkey": "70441609369d77ea553d805ee9af58b29e4c39d5b08b3956741839c2f3feebcc",
"created_at": 1695680646,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [],
"content": "Monero was created in 2014 as a fork of a project called “Bytecoin” by a small community of developers. \n\nMonero is not a fork of Bitcoin, and uses an entirely new codebase called “Cryptonote” that has evolved into the Monero protocol. \n\nMonero was started with three core aims – privacy that is usable and approachable for the masses, by default, a scalable and iterating base-layer, and ASIC-resistance to enable commodity hardware mining which aids decentralization.\n\nMonero enables this default privacy for all users of the network through a variety of means:\n—RingCT: this technology hides all amounts sent and received on-chain (via Confidential Transactions), as well as hides which output is actually being spent among (currently) 10 others (via ring signatures). This requires no coordination and is completely non-interactive (unlike CoinJoin) and happens entirely via the protocol itself.\n—Stealth addresses: this technology hides sender and receiver addresses on-chain by letting the sender generate a one-time address using the receiver’s public key, so no actual addresses are ever published to the blockchain.\n—Dandelion++: This technology helps to hide the sender’s IP address when sending Monero by using a special method of relaying transactions to other nodes.",
"sig": "f3b66809d9a0ed632f47be4692343a1bcde1a372815823347d0eabf7787860b846214f75bf3c8361195cd076e1e6be8e7006177c88700eeaa89edcbe22752302"
}