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Inside the blockchain developers’ mind: Can EOS deliver a killer social DApp?

What are the limitations that are preventing mainstream adoption and what is the current DApp landscape?

Cointelegraph is following the development of an entirely new blockchain from inception to mainnet and beyond through its series, Inside the Blockchain Developer’s Mind, written by Andrew Levine of Koinos Group.

In my first article in this series, I explained why Ethereum and Steem haven’t been able to deliver a mainstream social decentralized application (DApp), despite taking two very different approaches and how this makes the solution seem. Therefore, why not combine the fee-less system developed for Steem with the flexibility of a blockchain with smart contracts like Ethereum? Then, we could give developers the best of both worlds, enabling them to create free-to-use applications with the freedom to add new features whenever they want.

One could argue that this is exactly what Dan Larimer was trying to do when he left Steem and began work on EOS. Now, four years after the release of EOS, Larimer is planning to release “Fractally,” a new social application built on EOS. But, this begs the question: Why has no one been able to build a successful social media application on EOS? After all, it's not like no one has tried.

Remember Voice?

Block.one, the company Larimer founded and led as the chief technology officer, invested $150 million into their own social application Voice, which they then released not on the EOS mainnet but on its own dedicated blockchain.

This was odd because the entire purpose of a general-purpose blockchain is that it should be possible to launch any application on top of it. As I explained in my previous article, the whole problem with Steem was that it was its own separate blockchain and so it didn't benefit from the kind of developer and user adoption that Ethereum did. It should come as no surprise then that Voice has simply failed to deliver.

Related: Social applications are the next big trend in crypto

Fractally: Larimer’s new big thing

Larimer is now at it again with Fractally, which he says will “bring incentivized content creation to EOS.” The secret, he claims, is a “fractal governance” system, but this doesn’t explain why no one has been able to build a social application on EOS with mainstream adoption. In fact, even if Larimer can launch a great social application on EOS, what does it say about that platform that the only person able to build a great application is the literal inventor of that platform. So, what happened?

Steem x Ethereum = EOS

In a way, what Larimer was trying to do with EOS was exactly what I had described at the end of the last article. Combining the best of Steem (now Hive) and the best of Ethereum. But, therein “lies the rub.” There are three things Larimer took from Steem that might seem small, but have incredible consequences that EOS is still grappling with to this day.

On Ethereum, users have just addressed similar to Bitcoin addresses, which are a long string of numbers and letters that are free to create because they don’t take up any network storage. This is critical because anything that takes up network storage or uses some of the network’s computational resources has a real-world cost that must be paid by someone.

Steem wanted to be a social blockchain and so, the theory went. They needed a centralized account that would be easy to remember which they would use to manage their frequent interactions. So, it made perfect sense for these accounts to have human-readable names that were easy to remember, but that also meant that they took up network storage. But, this centralized account also makes you a target. If you have a single private key that you regularly use to access an account and that account holds valuable tokens, then hackers are going to do their best to gain access to your computer so that they can steal your money and anything else of value you might have on there.

Related: An inside look at the moral and technical considerations of crypto social media

To solve that problem, every account name also had multiple addresses associated with it each with different authority levels so that the user wasn’t always exposing the private key for the address holding all their tokens. All of this stuff is taking up valuable network storage which is why, despite having fee-less transactions, Steem had an account creation fee.

Expensive storage

Larimer obviously liked this design because he implemented a very similar system on EOS — account creation fee and all. To make matters worse, the EOS database is built on something called “memory-mapped files,” another vestige of the Steem design, an important consequence of which is that it is designed to use the most expensive form of storage possible: random-access memory (RAM). This means that EOS users don’t just need to buy accounts, but those accounts are going to be inherently expensive because what you’re really buying is the RAM needed to store that information.

Fee-less BUT

What this really highlights is that fee-lessness is clearly not a binary. EOS is fee-less, to a degree. It is fee-less, except for accounts. And, since smart contracts also consume network storage, well you’re going to have to buy some more RAM for those too. But, EOS is by no means the only blockchain that takes this approach to fees, in fact, when we left Steem and evaluated all the options, we couldn’t find a single blockchain that didn’t introduce fees at some point in the user experience.

That is one of the major reasons why we decided to build an entirely new blockchain framework from scratch because all of these blockchains design fees into their very foundations. We needed to build an entirely new foundation around the idea of true fee-lessness, no exceptions.

Related: Gas-free transactions will revolutionize Web3

Fee-less mana

That solution was a system where simply holding a Koinos Network’s native token KOIN allows you to use the blockchain without introducing any friction at all. The system we outlined in our mana whitepaper does just that, and a prototype of that system is already running on the Koinos testnet.

As we explain in the white paper, mana is a fee-less alternative to Ethereum’s gas. Just like gas on Ethereum, everything a user does consumes mana. Unlike gas, however, users don’t have to spend their crypto on gas every time they want to do anything — that’s a fee. Instead, every liquid token is “born” with mana inside of it that is consumed down when the user transacts, but which regenerates over time. Once any of the mana in a token is consumed, the token becomes locked until the mana regenerates. In this way, doing anything on the blockchain has an opportunity cost, but does not cost the user any actual tokens. In other words, it is truly fee-less.

Free-to-use DApps

But, doesn’t this mean that users still have to buy tokens in order to use the blockchain? Isn’t that basically a fee? This is why mana is designed to allow developers to pay the mana consumed by a given contract, or simply delegate their mana to their users. In this way, people can use mana-powered blockchains without ever having to acquire any tokens at all. It is this kind of frictionless user experience that we believe is critical to delivering social applications with the kind of user experiences that allow for viral adoption. Fee-less “except,” is simply not fee-less enough.

I’m sure a lot of things have changed since the launch of EOS and will continue to change as that ecosystem matures. Every software product has its strengths and weaknesses. My goal isn’t to criticize EOS but to explain why the DApp landscape is the way it is and how the architectural evolution of blockchain technology (Ethereum to Steem/Graphene to EOS) resulted in the limitations that are preventing mainstream adoption.

“Those who do not understand history are doomed to repeat it,” said Edmond Burke.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Andrew Levine is the CEO of Koinos Group, a team of industry veterans accelerating decentralization through accessible blockchain technology. Their foundational product is Koinos, a fee-less and infinitely upgradeable blockchain with universal language support.

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Serbia Reviews License Applications From 3 Cryptocurrency Exchanges

Serbia Reviews License Applications From 3 Cryptocurrency ExchangesThree crypto exchanges have applied for licensing in Serbia, which recently adopted legislation regulating its digital asset space. The government in Belgrade expects the companies to obtain authorization within weeks and offer Serbs the option to buy and sell cryptocurrencies legally. Crypto Trading Platforms and Token Issuers File for Licenses in Serbia Authorities in Serbia […]

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Crypto​.com is the #1 app in the Google Play Store in the US

The exchange’s app was also the third most downloaded on the U.S. Apple App Store last week but has since fallen to twentieth.

Cryptocurrency exchange Crypto.com now tops the charts as the most downloaded app for the U.S. Google Play Store across all categories.

According to the most recent list of Google Play Store’s top free apps, Crypto.com’s app has surged in the ranks of apps by the number of downloads to jump to the first position ahead of TikTok. Coinbase’s app sits at third ahead of Cash App, while Voyager Digital is tenth following the trading platform’s announcement it would be partnering with the Dallas Mavericks basketball team.

Crypto.com’s rising popularity could be the result of the exchange releasing an ad campaign featuring actor Matt Damon, arguably one of the biggest celebrities to throw his name behind a cryptocurrency exchange. The “fortune favors the brave” ad, which went live last week, is aimed at reaching a global audience of potential crypto users and investors.

The number of downloads for a company’s app could be viewed as an indicator of market interest. While Crypto.com currently holds the top position on the Google Play Store, the exchange’s app was the third most downloaded on the U.S. Apple App Store last week — it has since fallen to the twentieth position. Though the campaign featuring Damon likely contributed to the price of the native Crypto.com Coin (CRO) rising to a six-month high of $0.2294 on Oct. 29, the token has dropped roughly 7% to reach $0.2134 at the time of publication.

Related: Google bans 8 ‘deceptive’ crypto apps from Play Store

The description of Crypto.com’s trading app also includes Shiba Inu (SHIB) following Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH). The price of the Dogecoin (DOGE) clone token has surged significantly in the last year, with some retail businesses now accepting it as a form of payment.

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El Salvador’s Bitcoin wallet is ‘95% fixed,’ President Bukele says

El Salvador’s state Bitcoin wallet has continued facing major issues in a week after the official rollout.

Just a week after Bitcoin (BTC) became legal tender in El Salvador, President Nayib Bukele has admitted that the rollout of the state Bitcoin wallet was too much of a challenge.

Chivo, El Salvador’s official Bitcoin wallet, has temporarily disabled new registrations and halted app downloads for new smartphone models due to ongoing issues with the app, Bukele said on Twitter late Monday.

“Both things will be enabled until the application has no errors,” the president noted, adding that the Chivo team expects to resume registrations and downloads in a couple more days.

“The technical errors of the Chivo wallet have been 95% fixed. In the next few days it will be working at 100%,” Bukele wrote. He noted that El Salvador’s 200 Bitcoin ATMs currently “work perfectly,” as well as Chivo-supported 50 ATMs in the United States.

Bukele went on to say that the bumpy rollout of the Chivo wallet was due to an early rollout, stating:

“Launching everything in three months was too much of a challenge and we made mistakes, but we are already fixing them and hundreds of thousands of Salvadorans can already use Chivo with no issues.”

According to the president, the Chivo wallet has amassed a total of half a million users since the app’s launch last Tuesday.

Related: Bitcoin investors are reportedly exempt from taxes in El Salvador

As previously reported, El Salvador launched the official Bitcoin wallet in cooperation with Mexican crypto exchange Bitso, which said it was the “core crypto service provider” for Chivo. The wallet subsequently faced major issues on the launch day, going offline for maintenance due to capacity errors. Despite Chivo’s prompt efforts to fix the issues, many users have apparently continued experiencing problems with transacting or withdrawing from Chivo, with some users claiming that the app’s functionality was “almost zero.”

Santiago Alvarado, Bitso’s director of cross-border payments, declined to comment on the Chivo wallet’s functionality to Cointelegraph, stating that the exchange “is not at all involved with the front-end development of the Chivo wallet.”

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Chinese Banks Seek New Applications for Digital Yuan in Investment and Insurance

Chinese Banks Seek New Applications for Digital Yuan in Investment and InsuranceTwo Chinese banks are expanding their pilot programs for the digital national fiat. The state-owned financial institutions have revealed they are aiming to allow digital yuan holders to acquire investment funds and insurance products using the new currency. Chinese Banks Partner With Fund Managers and Insurers in Search of Digital Yuan Use Cases China Construction […]

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Google bans 8 ‘deceptive’ crypto apps from Play Store

A Trend Micro report claims that over 120 fake crypto-focused apps are still operational on the Play Store, some exceeding over 100,000 downloads.

Google has delisted eight allegedly fraudulent mobile apps from its Play Store that were duping crypto enthusiasts by charging fees for an illegitimate cloud mining service. 

Fraudulent mobile applications have now become a popular method to mislead unwary users with high success rates. Trend Micro’s latest research discovered eight Android applications that were exploiting crypto enthusiasts by charging a monthly fee under the false pretext of running a legitimate cloud mining service.

Further analysis into the matter uncovered that the malicious apps hosted by Google — posing as crypto mining applications — were deceiving users into watching paid ads and paying for a cloud mining service that does not exist.

According to the report, users were not only being charged a monthly fee of approximately $15 but were also subject to more payments for enabling “increased mining capabilities.” In addition, some of the apps required an upfront payment from the user.

The reportedly fraudulent crypto apps included mining services such as BitFunds, Bitcoin Miner, Daily Bitcoin Rewards, Crypto Holic, MineBit Pro, Bitcoin 2021, and Ethereum (ETH) - Pool Mining Cloud. The list also includes a crypto wallet service named Bitcoin (BTC) – Pool Mining Cloud Wallet.

While the above findings were reported to Google Play and have been repotedly removed from the Play Store, Trend Micro claims to have spotted numerous other fraudulent apps that have been downloaded over 100,000 times. The company’s data suggests that over 120 fake apps still exist on the Play Store:

“These apps, which do not have cryptocurrency mining capabilities and deceive users into watching in-app ads, have affected more than 4,500 users globally from July 2020 to July 2021.”

Related: Google running crypto ads again as new policy goes into effect

On Aug. 3, Google revised its ad policy which allows crypto exchanges and wallet services to market their products to Google users. As a part of this drive, advertisers need to be registered with Financial Crimes Enforcement Network as a “money services business and with at least one state as a money transmitter, or a federal or state-chartered bank entity.”

However, the established policy prevents initial coin offerings, businesses and celebrities from shilling cryptocurrencies. On the other end of the spectrum, social media giant TikTok has resorted to completely banning crypto ads on its platform, a move similar to Google's previous policy back in 2018.

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Bitcoin rewards app Lolli closes $10M investment round

Acrew Capital, Lolli’s primary backer during the raise, said the app is well positioned to boost Bitcoin adoption in the long run.

Popular Bitcoin (BTC) rewards app Lolli has received fresh backing from venture funds and other investors as it plans to scale its services to a wider audience. 

On Wednesday, the company announced it had closed a $10 million Series A funding round led by Acrew Capital, with additional participation from UpNorth Management, Animal Capital, Banana Capital and Formula. Influencers such as Logan Paul and Chantel Jeffries also participated.

Several of Lolli’s previous backers, including Seven Seven Six, 3K VC, Gabriel Leydon and Foreruner Ventures, also recommitted to the company in the latest fundraiser.

Lolli said the financing will go towards enterprise-wide expansion, including hiring new talent, pursuing partnerships and further developing the recently launched mobile app.

Alex Adelman, Lolli’s co-founder and CEO, said his company’s mission is to make Bitcoin “more accessible for all.” He added:

“We believe it’s imperative to align with top creators to both educate, distribute, and amplify the power of bitcoin to the masses.”

Related: CoinFund debuts $83M crypto startup fund

Lauren Kolodny, Acrew Capital’s co-founder and managing partner, described Lolli’s services as providing a low barrier to entry for early Bitcoin users.

Lolli has attracted several high-profile endorsements in the recent past. In March of this year, the company secured $5 million in investments to be used for further developing its mobile app. In May 2020, actor and entrepreneur Ashton Kutcher was one of several investors to participate in Lolli’s oversubscribed $3 million seed round.

On the business front, Lolli secured a major partnership with auction marketplace eBay in November of last year. Users who downloaded the Chrome extension were able to earn 1% back in Bitcoin when they shop on eBay.

Related: Online marketplace eBay to allow NFT sales

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A decentralized app store might lead crypto toward more centralization

On the inevitable journey into the mainstream, crypto might replace one gatekeeper with another. Are we ready for this sacrifice?

The estimated windfall Apple got from its App Store in 2020 is $67 billion. That’s up from $50 billion in 2019, a 28% increase. Even as the company has lowered its commissions for smaller developers, the App Store remains a major component of Apple’s bottom-line profits. And it’s not just Apple taking a cut of developer revenue: On Android, the world’s most popular mobile operating system, the Google Play Store netted $38.6 billion in 2020.

That’s over $105 billion in revenue from the top two app stores combined. It’s no wonder that regulators in many countries are closely considering whether there is sufficient competition in the marketplace. So it should come as no surprise that Coinbase, America’s most visible and well-known crypto exchange, also wants to be the on-ramp to the decentralized application economy.

But what do we sacrifice when we replace one gatekeeper for another? Does it jeopardize the decentralized ethos and accessibility for all that’s sacred to many crypto believers? These are important questions worthy of discussion as we build on our momentum and push further into the mainstream.

Related: Decentralization vs. centralization: Where does the future lie? Experts answer

The 80/20 rule

Vilfredo Pareto had it right with his 80/20 rule: 80% of revenues comes from 20% of customers. However, in the case of Apple’s App Store, it’s more like the 95/2 rule: 95% of revenue comes from the top 2% of apps.

Let’s assume that a decentralized application (DApp) store would reflect a similar reality, where the most successful apps generate the most revenue. That means any DApp store that managed to secure the most popular apps would have a huge advantage. The most well-funded platforms would spend lavishly to gain exclusivity and secure gatekeeper status. Then, anyone that wanted to access the top apps would need to go through that gatekeeper.

The monopolistic elements of any app store are what make the economics so lucrative. If you own the rails, you own the profits — it’s that simple.

But the 80/20 rule shouldn’t extend to Web 3.0 economics. Rather than many profits for the few, it’s many profits for many more, with users participating in the governance, growth, maintenance and daily operations of the ecosystems they favor. The ownership aspects of the Web 3.0 economy distribute rewards to ecosystem participants more evenly based on their contributions. It’s a more balanced dynamic that proposes a new way to do business.

Related: Is a new decentralized internet, or Web 3.0, possible?

Building the Web 3.0 DApp store

What will it take to ensure truly decentralized distribution for DApps? We’d need a DApp store that meets a few criteria:

  • Governance — first and foremost, a DApp store would be run by the community. There would need to be a decentralized autonomous organization to vote on all governance issues, such as commissions, security, etc.
  • Ownership — profits would be distributed to the community according to its governance structure. There would also need to be funds reserved for the organization to manage app verification, secure the system and maintain the community.
  • Tokenomics — there’s an opportunity to do some very interesting things around incentivizing developers to use the platform exclusively and do other key tasks like support the distribution infrastructure and other essential technologies.
  • Interoperability — users should be able to move freely between different DApp stores, taking their apps (and their data) with them. There can be no one DApp store to rule them all.

Related: Game theory meets DeFi: Bouncing ideas around tokenomic design

Apps are the center of the digital economy, something that will continue as we progress toward Web 3.0. The on-ramps into decentralized finance, nonfungible tokens and other emerging digital assets require mobile access points that bridge the gap between those who have laptops and those who only access the internet via mobile devices.

We’re in the midst of the transition from Web 2.0 to Web 3.0. While gatekeepers remain in positions of strength, they will continue to pursue user growth alongside decentralized protocols looking for access points to new users.

When we’ve truly transitioned into Web 3.0, we’ll likely see DApps that serve smaller niches than they do today. We’ll see a vibrant ecosystem of DApps that are more focused and developed by compact teams.

Related: How NFTs, DeFi and Web 3.0 are intertwined

We’ll also see apps deconstructed into component parts. For instance, a decentralized exchange will be deconstructed into several layers: the user-facing front-end, the aggregator back-end and the liquidity provider as infrastructure. It’s akin to the “monolith to microservices” evolution in the software cloud infrastructure space.

Without true decentralization when it comes to apps, we’ve simply replaced one gatekeeper for another. The key here is going to be the community’s commitment to supporting a diverse array of app store gateways.

What’s at stake?

The risk is that, on our inevitable journey into the mainstream, convenience and ease-of-use will trump decentralization. In fact, that’s often why centralized gatekeepers emerge: they make things less complicated, which in turn makes things more accessible to the masses.

As the crypto community works together to build a thriving digital asset economy that benefits the majority, we must all keep these tradeoffs in mind. We absolutely must make digital assets easy to understand and accessible while also pushing back on any arguments that centralizing power in the hands of the few is a worthy tradeoff on the fast track to the mainstream.

We can — and should — push back to protect what makes our shared vision so powerful: a future that’s accessible to all.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Diane Dai is the co-founder and chief marketing officer of DODO, a decentralized digital asset exchange based in Singapore. She is a pioneer in the Chinese DeFi community and has extensive experience in marketing, social media management and business development. Prior to founding DODO, she spent time at DDEX and CypherJump.

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AppSwarm’s DOGE division calls for a global dev teams to build off Dogecoin

AppSwarm’s newly launched Dogecoin division DogeLabs wants to become a global Dogecoin player by uniting worldwide DevOps teams.

A Dogecoin (DOGE)-focused division at publicly-traded OTC software firm AppSwarm (SWRM) is looking to bring together a global development teams to build off the Dogecoin blockchain.

DogeLabs, a newly launched division of AppSwarm’s blockchain research lab, TulsaLabs, announced Wednesday a new initiative calling on DevOps teams to unite their efforts in building a “sort of decentralized network” of DOGE developers across the globe.

“These teams would share ideas and provide support for Doge based applications for both commercial and possible larger enterprises within their local jurisdictions under the DogeLabs network,” DogeLabs said in the announcement.

DogeLabs founder and CEO Thomas Bustamante pointed out on DogeLabs official Telegram group that the new initiative would be “quickest and cheapest way to rapidly expand DogeLabs as a global player in Dogecoin.” The Dogecoin lab will review potential partners over coming weeks, Bustamante noted, adding that DevOps teams must meet certain criteria that would be posted shortly.

Currently operating in New York and Tulsa, DogeLabs is a blockchain research lab and startup accelerator focused on commercial applications around the Doge protocol. The lab’s CEO is also tfounder and CEO of AI Venturetech, an artificial intelligence startup that cooperates with AppSwarm on its blockchain research lab. The company apparently moved into blockchain development after its securities offering was rejected by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission in 2020.

AppSwarm did not immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.

Dogecoin-related development appears to be promising as DOGE has emerged as one of the fastest-growing digital currency this year, posting gains of up to 13,500% year-to-date after surging from $0.005 to an all-time high of around $0.73. Amid the altcoin’s parabolic growth, Canadian company Geometric Energy Corporation announced plans to send a mission to the moon onboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in a Dogecoin-based deal.

Launched back in 2013 by IBM software engineer Billy Markus and Adobe engineer Jackson Palmer, Dogecoin is a cryptocurrency based on the popular “Doge” meme featuring a Shiba Inu dog. Dogecoin’s protocol is based on Luckycoin (LKY), which itself derived from the Litecoin blockchain.

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