Goodbye Blockchain. Hello Hashgraph.

in #cryptocurrency6 years ago

hashgraph vs blockchainIf you thought blockchain tech was immune from obsolescence, you have either been misled or are simply being naive. The overwhelming greed and malformed hype in the blockchain space as it relates to cryptocurrencies has been so grand that it’s clouding our better vision and judgement and is creating a cult like atmosphere – perhaps unwittingly so.

It’s time to snap back to empirical reality and accept the fact that a better technology exists. This tech retains most of the properties that blockchain introduces – that is being a distributed, cryptographically secure, fault tolerant network that achieves fair consensus, all without the scalability and security issues that plagued “legacy” blockchain networks.

The new consensus algorithm

Introducing Hashgraph – a fair and fast, byzantine fault tolerant consensus algorithm. According to the founding Hashgraph team consisting of computer science and cybersecurity pioneers Dr. Leemon Baird and Mance Harmon, the hashgraph consensus method achieves the following notable feats:

It’s fast: 250,000+ transactions per second and limited only by a users bandwidth (Pre-Sharding) It’s fair: mathematically proven fairness (via Consensus Time Stamping) It’s secure: bank-grade security (Asynchronous Byzantine Fault Tolerant)

Why is Hashgraph superior to Blockchain?

Unlike the presently employed blockchain networks such as that of Bitcoin and Ethereum, hashgraph eliminates the need for the massive computational and energy requirements that Proof-of-Work consensus succumbs to. Using the ‘gossip about gossip’ protocol enables hashgraph to be lightweight, nimble and much like gossip between friends, is able to spread exponentially and almost by definition is transparent. For example, the Bitcoin blockchain is about 60GB in size, where as hashgraph uses a fraction of that memory, about 1GB, allowing cell phones to act as nodes. Here is an image that provides a reasonable comparison by analogy.blockchain obsoleteGossip about gossip uses votes instead of ‘blocks’, and as a result can achieve transaction times the likes of which blockchain can only dream of. If used to create another cryptocurrency, hashgraph will eliminate the issue of network forks caused by network congestion thanks to its ability to scale infinitely. Some blockchains are Byzantine and others are Fault Tolerant, but no blockchain is both Byzantine AND Fault Tolerant. With hashgraph, the network is guaranteed to be Byzantine Fault Tolerant, 100% of the time. Unlike a blockchain where a miner can choose the order for which transactions occur in a block, can delay orders by placing them in future blocks, and can even stop them entirely from entering the system, the hashgraph consensus method timestamps each node (event), so assumptions are no longer required, ergo Byzantine. In other words, no member can prevent the community from reaching a consensus, nor can they change the consensus once it has been reached. Blockchain merely assumes that a consensus was reached as probability approaches 1 whereas hashgraph guarantees it thanks to its generational “gossip about gossip”.

Here is an updated community message from the Hashgraph team that makes further necessary distinctions and clarifications:

Note that we are our own consensus algorithm. While Ethereum is looking at PoS with Casper, our algorithm uses something called Virtual Voting – its a voting system – without having to do the votes. Hashgraph uses a protocol called “Gossip about Gossip” to achieve consensus. Gossip is a well known computer science term, which can be defined as calling any random node and telling that node everything you know, that it does not know. In distributed ledger technology the “baseline” or minimum bandwidth required is that the transactions go to every node. Gossip about Gossip refers to attaching a small additional amount of information to this Gossip, which contains the last person we talked to, hence, we are gossiping about the information we gossiped. Using this information, we can build the Hashgraph. Once we have the Hashgraph, it is extremely easy to know what a node would vote, because we know what each node knows, and when they knew it. We now can use the data from the Hashgraph as an input to 30 year old voting algorithms, and achieve consensus essentially for free. These 30 year old voting algorithms have strong math proofs- they are Asynchronous Byzantine Fault Tolerant, which means we know when we will achieve consensus, guaranteed, and our math proofs make no assumptions about the speed of the internet, due to firewalls, ddos attacks, viruses or botnets. In addition, because of gossip about gossip, Hashgraph is extremely fast, (250,000 transactions/sec), and we also get fair ordering and time stamping on every event.

Use cases for Hashgraph

If you thought Blockchain was powerful, think again. Here are just some of the possible applications that can be built on top of hashgraph:

Markets Identity Gaming Cryptocurrency Online Collaboration Public Ledger

Here are some promising, sample test-bed projects that were built on top of Hashgraph at a recent TechCrunch hosted Hackathon event.

Project Fair Auction Ledger

Project Ground Zero

All is not lost

Don’t fire sell your Bitcoin or Ether just yet. Blockchain paved the way for cryptocurrencies which still have their place in our new decentralized eco-system. For starters, unlike Satoshis original vision, Hashgraph is NOT open-source and therefore is not truly decentralized. The technology is patented by Leemon Baird and his colleagues over at Swirlds, a startup that has recently raised over $3 million to help commercialize the use of Hashgraph. Think of Swirlds as a distributed Oracle, in that their main clients would be corporations and institutions that want to leverage the decentralized properties of permissioned consensus algorithms with absolutely no possibility of downtime, rather than just cryptocurrencies used by enthusiasts and cypherpunks alike.

However, Swirlds also stated that making hashgraph open-source is still on the table, and if that happens, the free and open market will ultimately decide where to appropriate their value as it relates to cryptocurrencies and beyond.

If you are interested in learning more about Hashgraph, here’s an interview we did that goes into way greater detail.

source - www.cryptoanswers.net
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