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- Why We Need All The Altcoins We Can Get
Did you know that more than one altcoin is launched per day, on average? Website Altcoin Calendar
keeps a running total: one day this week we’d had linkcoin, onyxcoin
(version 2, no less), xryptbit, and limicoin. The day before that, we
saw the birth of bizcoin, shopcoin x, filebit, and, predictably given
the political situation, palestinecoin.
The obvious temptation is to say that there are too many of them.
After all, the cryptocurrency markets are littered with crummy coins
that add little technical merit to the coins that they cloned, and which
have no clear goal or community backing.
Sometimes they’re launched by enthusiasts from their
basements, with good hearts but no idea how to execute. Sometimes
they’re 'flashcoins', launched by smart fraudsters, intent on pumping
and dumping for a fast buck. Either way, many altcoins are like the fast
food of crypto. They’re no good for you. You’ll buy them, and receive
no value. And half an hour after you’ve bought in, you’ll want another one.
Some altcoins may offer returns, but they’re like penny
stocks: highly volatile, and difficult to predict. That makes investment
difficult, especially when they’re entirely unregulated.
However, this still doesn’t mean that there are too many coins. In fact, we need them all.
A frothy market
Proliferation is common during the early stages of any
major new trend. Technology is like Mentos and Coke. When someone drops a
new concept into the market, you’ll see it froth and bubble, as people
try to implement it in different forms.
Back in the early days of the home computer, there were
dozens of them, which made many geeks like me insanely happy. The Apple
II and the IBM PC were well known, of course, but then there were Vic
20s, the Z80s, the BBC Micros, and the obscure ones, such as the
Imagination Machine and the Lynx.
“Alts create a playground for testing features and concepts that would never make their way quickly into bitcoin.”
I had a ZX Spectrum, which you might call the dogecoin of
early home computers. Small to begin with, but cute to look at, and
incredibly successful, it was supported by a dedicated community, at
least in the UK. But few memory. Much slow.
Over the years, as the technology matured, all these
machines fell away. Only a handful of platforms now remain for computers
at home. But it was important for the market to have them when the
concepts were so immature, because competition bred innovation.
Hardware is difficult to design and finance, of course.
Software is far easier. When the first computer viruses rolled around,
there were not that many. Then, people learned the concepts and began
writing their own. As computer software inadvertently made it easier
(thanks, Microsoft macro programming language!) the barrier to entry
decreased. Within four years, the first virus construction kits
appeared, and then any wannabe evil genius could make one.
The barrier to entry is similarly low for cryptocurrency.
The code is open source, and easy for a developer to tailor in a few
working days. Already, there are online tools appearing that let you
colour by numbers, and create your own alt with next to no technical
skill. There will be a glut of coins for a long time to come.
Faced with a barrage of new coins, what can cause an
altcoin to rise above the general din and become more interesting? There
are several contributing factors:
Community activity
Coins with a strong community can do particularly well. In
some cases, a community builder will work alongside the coin’s
technical mastermind, focusing on marshalling a group of people together
and making things happen. It’s hard not to respect these coins.
When you have tens of people all lobbying to have an
altcoin used at conferences and festivals, and creating cross-promotions
with products and services, it quickly becomes the little coin that
could.
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Ideological or political innovation
Coins are often interesting when they promote a particular ideology or cause. One example is solarcoin, the environmental coin that links itself to renewable energy production.
Some of the earliest ‘national’ coins – whether auroracoin, or the Lakota Nation’s mazacoin – stimulated discussions about financial freedom and economic sovereignty. Now, national coins are sprouting like weeds. Suddenly, it becomes less interesting, because it’s already been done once.
Developer activity
The developer is key. Ideally, the developer is well-known
to the community. They are consistent and reliable at updating the
coin’s code, and it is encouraging to have more than one developer to
handle various aspects of coin development, including exchange
integration and block-chain explorers.
However, it’s easy for developers to get burned out, or to go rogue. In the past, there have been cases
where a single developer for an alt has absconded, leaving the
community floundering and angry at having put in so much work building
the ecosystem for the coin.
Technical innovation
Coins that push technical boundaries can often be
interesting because they enable the cryptocurrency community at large to
test out new ideas.
Computing concepts are one example. Coins that introduce
new cryptographic algorithms, or different proofs of work can be
stimulating. Economic concepts are another, and coins have tested these
too. Freicoin tried this with its demurrage (the application of a carrying cost to money) approach, for instance.
A celebrity
Is Max Keiser a celebrity? I don’t know, but he’s the only near-famous person to publicly launch his own coin as an extension of a personal brand. So that makes it at least intellectually interesting.
One of the notable things about celebrity coins if
launched or endorsed by the celeb themselves is that the stability of
the coin is supported by a brand that people have already bought into.
If Kanye had launched coinye
himself, it may have had some significant staying power. On the other
hand, tying the fortunes of the coin to the fortunes of the celeb might
not always be a good thing: when the A-lister becomes a C-lister, the
coin's popularity is likely to wane in parallel.
Relationship with bitcoin
Just because a coin is cerebrally interesting doesn’t mean
it’s going to thrive or go up drastically in price, though, and that’s
what most altcoin investors want – auroracoin and mazacoin haven’t fared
too well, for example. But ultimately, the value in these coins doesn’t
come from their pinball movements on the markets. It comes from their
role as counterparts to bitcoin.
Bitcoin’s developers are a conservative bunch, and rightly
so. They’re steering a core architecture that forms the basis for an
increasingly large commercial layer. In the early days, mistakes were
OK. The bitcoin economy would have been more forgiving, because it
didn’t really exist. Now that larger money is pouring into bitcoin’s
ecosystem, the devs can’t afford to screw it up. So any changes are well
thought out, and cautiously implemented.
The alts create a playground for testing features and
concepts that would never make their way quickly into bitcoin – a
research and development laboratory for features that may one day go
mainstream. The crummy coins with nothing to offer are noise that you’ll
find in any natural system. The alts with something to offer are the
signal. We must take the good with the bad.
And who knows? In time, an alt may develop with the right
mixture of innovation, community support and development expertise to
gain prominence over bitcoin. We’re in the early days of what promises
to be a long cycle of technological development. Anything’s possible.