Namecoin
Namecoin (Symbol: ℕ or NMC) is a cryptocurrency originally forked from bitcoin software. It is based on the code of bitcoin and uses the same proof-of-work algorithm. Like bitcoin, it is limited to 21 million coins.[1]
Namecoin | |
---|---|
Denominations | |
Plural | namecoins |
Symbol | ℕ |
Ticker symbol | NMC |
Subunits | |
1⁄1000 | millinamecoin |
1⁄1000000 | micronamecoin |
1⁄100000000 | swartz |
Development | |
Project fork of | Bitcoin |
Website | namecoin.org |
Ledger | |
Ledger start | 18 April 2011[1] |
Timestamping scheme | Proof-of-work (merged mining)[2] |
Hash function | SHA-256 |
Block time | 10 minutes[1] |
Supply limit | ℕ21,000,000[1] |
Namecoin can store data within its own blockchain transaction database. The original proposal for Namecoin called for Namecoin to insert data into bitcoin's blockchain directly. Anticipating scaling difficulties with this approach, a shared proof-of-work (POW) system was proposed to secure new cryptocurrencies with different use cases.
Namecoin's flagship use case is the censorship-resistant top level domain .bit
, which is functionally similar to .com
or .net
domains but is independent of ICANN, the main governing body for domain names.[3]
Transactions
A peer-to-peer network similar to bitcoin's handles Namecoin's transactions, balances and issuance through SHA256, proof-of-work scheme (they are issued when a small enough hash value is found, at which point a block is created; the process of finding these hashes and creating blocks is called mining). The issuing rate forms a geometric series, and the rate halves every 210,000 blocks, roughly every four years, reaching a final total of 21 million NMC.
Addresses
Payments and records in the Namecoin network are made to addresses, which are Base58-encoded hashes of users' public keys. They are strings of 33 numbers and letters which begin with the letter N or M. Initially addresses beginning with 1 existed but this was changed to avoid confusion with Bitcoin addresses.
Records
Each Namecoin record consists of a key and a value which can be up to 520 bytes in size. Each key is actually a path, with the namespace preceding the name of the record. The key d/example
signifies a record stored in the DNS namespace d
with the name example
and corresponds to the record for the example.bit
website. The content of d/example
is expected to conform to the DNS namespace specification.
The current fee for a record is 0.01 NMC and records expire after 36000 blocks (~200 days) unless updated or renewed. Namecoins used to purchase records are marked as used and destroyed, as giving the fee to miners would enable larger miners to register names at a significant discount.[4]
Uses
.bit is a top-level domain that was created outside the most commonly used Domain Name System (DNS) of the Internet, and is not sanctioned by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). The .bit domain is served via Namecoin infrastructure, which acts as an alternative, decentralized domain name system.
Proposed potential uses for Namecoin besides domain name registration include notary/timestamp systems.[5]
History
In September 2010, a discussion was started in the BitcoinTalk forum about a hypothetical system called BitDNS and generalizing bitcoin. Gavin Andresen and Satoshi Nakamoto joined the discussion in the BitcoinTalk forum and supported the idea of BitDNS, and a reward for implementing BitDNS was announced on the forum in December 2010. In June 2011, WikiLeaks mentioned the project via Twitter.[6]
On block 19200 Namecoin activated the merged mining upgrade to allow mining of Bitcoin and Namecoin simultaneously, instead of having to choose between one or the other; this fixed the issue of miners jumping from one blockchain to another when the profitability becomes favorable in the former.[2]
Two years later, in June 2013, NameID was launched.[7] NameID allows to associate profile information with identities on the Namecoin blockchain, and an OpenID provider to allow logging into existing websites with Namecoin identities. The main site itself is accompanied by an open protocol for password-less authentication with Namecoin identities, a corresponding free-software implementation and a supporting extension for Firefox.
In October 2013, Michael Gronager, main developer of libcoin, found a security issue in the Namecoin protocol, which allowed modifying foreign names. It was successfully fixed in a short timeframe and was never exploited, except for bitcoin.bit as a proof-of-concept.[8]
Namecoin was also mentioned by ICANN in a public draft report as the most well-known example of distributing control and privacy in DNS.[9]
A 2015 study found that of the 120,000 domain names registered on Namecoin, only 28 were in use.[10]
In July 2019, Namecoin's .bit namespace was dropped from OpenNIC.[11] OpenNIC cited Spamhaus (and by extension other antivirus software) blocking several of their servers due to spread of malware from some .bit domains[12] and justified their action also as a prevention of abuse for child pornography.[13] Incidentally, OpenNIC was at around the same time advised to drop support for .bit namespace due to security concerns of Namecoin and PRISM Break developers.[14]
See also
References
- Loibl, Andreas (2014-08-01). "Namecoin" (PDF).
- "Merged Mining: Analysis of Effects and Implications". repositum.tuwien.ac.at. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
- Dourado, Eli (2014-02-05). "Can Namecoin Obsolete ICANN (and More)?". Theumlaut.
- "Namecoin FAQ". Archived from the original on 2014-10-09.
- Kirk, Jeremy (2013-05-24). "Could the Bitcoin network be used as an ultrasecure notary service?". Techworld.
- "Twitter / wikileaks: Namecoin and Bitcoin will be ..." WikiLeaks, via Twitter. 2011-06-09. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
- Kraft, Daniel (2013-07-25). "NameID - Use namecoin id/ to log into OpenID sites". Namecoin Forum.
- bitcoin.bit name operation is in tx-id 2f034f2499c136a2c5a922ca4be65c1292815c753bbb100a2a26d5ad532c3919
- "The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Identifier Technology Innovation – Draft Report" (PDF). ICANN. 2014-02-21.
- Kalodner, H. A., Carlsten, M., Ellenbogen, P., Bonneau, J., & Narayanan, A. (2015, June). "An Empirical Study of Namecoin and Lessons for Decentralized Namespace Design". In WEIS.
- "Should OpenNIC drop support for NameCoin [OpenNIC Wiki]". wiki.opennic.org. Retrieved 2021-01-23.
- "discuss - Re: [opennic-discuss] Vote to keep or drop peering with NameCoin - arc". lists.opennicproject.org. Retrieved 2021-01-23.
- Cimpanu, Catalin (17 July 2019). "OpenNIC drops support for .bit domain names after rampant malware abuse". ZDNet. Retrieved 29 August 2019.
- "Drop OpenNIC (!2073) · Merge Requests · PRISM Break / PRISM Break". GitLab. Retrieved 2021-01-23.