{"id":66,"date":"2021-01-03T18:27:29","date_gmt":"2021-01-03T18:27:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/monkeycoder.work\/XLM\/?p=66"},"modified":"2022-01-27T08:16:15","modified_gmt":"2022-01-27T08:16:15","slug":"stellar-xlm-open-source","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/monkeycoder.work\/XLM\/stellar-xlm-open-source.html","title":{"rendered":"Stellar (XLM): Open Source Cryptocurrency"},"content":{"rendered":"
Stellar (XLM) is a vast open-source platform based on a publicly available and distributed blockchain network with its own cryptocurrency called Stellar Lumens (or simply: Lumen).<\/p>\n
Stellar cryptocurrency’s mission is to create financial products and services that connect people from around the world, including those who currently do not have access to banking services. The Stellar platform provides users with an efficient payment network that allows for any transaction with immediate confirmation and virtually zero fees.<\/p>\n
The platform also allows issuing tokens and organizing fundraisers, among other things in the form of ICOs. The Stellar platform also has a decentralized stock exchange (DEX)<\/a>, which supports not only the most popular cryptocurrencies (such as Bitcoin and Litecoin), but also fiduciary currencies (including US dollars and euros).<\/p>\n The name of the platform Stellar comes from the English adjective “stellar,” and the cryptocurrency itself got its name from the basic unit of measurement of light flux – lumens.<\/p>\n Stellar Lumens is an inflationary cryptocurrency (a constant inflation rate of 1% per year), with no limit on the maximum supply of coins. At the launch of the network (July 2014), exactly 100 million XLMs were created, and the total number of lumens now exceeds 104 million, but there are less than 19 million units of this cryptocurrency on the digital market.<\/p>\n The history\u00a0of Stellar’s platform development<\/a> began in 2014, when developer Jed Caleb and lawyer Joyce Kim launched a website called “Secret Bitcoin Project,” through which they tested software testers for their platform.<\/p>\n At the time, Jed Caleb was not only a seasoned Internet entrepreneur who created the decentralized file sharing network eDonkey in 2000, but also had extensive experience in the cryptocurrency industry. Since 2010, he founded the infamous cryptocurrency exchange Mt.Gox, which became famous for its subsequent spectacular collapse.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Since 2012, Jed Caleb has co-created the decentralized settlement platform Ripple (XRP). The Stellar platform also began working with startup Stripe, offering the latter online payments. Stripe’s CEO Patrick Collison, along with two of Stellar’s network creators, founded a non-profit organization called the Stellar Foundation, which aims to develop the XLM platform and provide access to financial services in regions of economic exclusion.<\/p>\n Of the initial 100 million XLM units created, 2 million were given to the Stripe startup and 25 million tokens were earmarked for the social mission of economically integrating people without access to banking services.<\/p>\n The XLM network was launched on July 31, 2014 and was originally based on the source code of the Ripple platform, which was previously developed by Jed Caleb. During the first half of the year, more than 3 million users registered on the Stellar network, and the market capitalization of this cryptocurrency exceeded $15 million.<\/p>\n However, in December 2014, there were numerous technical mishaps related to problems reaching consensus between the nodes of the Lumens network, which even led to an unplanned separation of the blockchain system. The solution to the problem was that Jed Caleb abandoned the consensus algorithm used in the Ripple network and developed an autonomous consensus protocol (SCP). This development involved cryptography professor David Meseris of Stanford University.<\/p>\n The new source code was published in April 2015, and the Stellar network was updated on November 5, 2015. The code update not only fixed the system’s problems, but also improved the network’s performance and security.<\/p>\nHistory of the development of the cryptocurrency Stellar<\/h2>\n
Standalone Consensus Protocol (SCP) on the Stellar network<\/h2>\n
Commercial Division of the InterStellar Project<\/h2>\n