May 5, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Litecoin [LTC] creator Charlie Lee elucidates on the fungibility of Bitcoin and Litecoin

Litecoin [LTC] creator Charlie Lee elucidates on the fungibility of Bitcoin and Litecoin

Charlie Lee, the creator of Litecoin, elucidated on Fungibility, during the thirteenth episode of Magical Crypto Friends. Here, even Samson Mow, the CSO of Blockstream, opined on the same topic by adding the concept of tainted coins.

Prior to speaking about Fungibility, the creator of one of the world’s largest cryptocurrencies emphasized on the importance of privacy and fungibility and added that they are the next battleground for the currency. Moreover, Litecoin is currently looking into Confidential Transactions, in order to ensure that the coin is fungible, according to the announcement made by Charlie Lee earlier this month on Twitter.

During the discussion, Lee explained Fungibility as,

“So, fungibility basically means that each unit of the coin or money whatever it is is indistinguishable and cannot be discriminated against. Right, so if you, for example, I like give you go to a store and need to pay like $5 for a cup of coffee and you pick up a $20 bill from there from wallet you don’t really care which one you take out it they’re exactly the same to the recipient.”

However on the contrary, this is not the same case with bitcoin and Litecoin, implied Charlie. He added that a person’s account is shut down if bitcoin or Litecoin is being sent from a darknet marketplace or a gambling site or any place that is not approved by regulations. He said,

“So, the coins that you spend are not fungible so a lot of times even myself when I’m spending coins I have to like decide which output to you use right if I just buy the coins for an exchange I may not know may not want someone to know how many coins I have or link to my other coins and I choose an output that came from somewhere else”

He went on to say,

“And that’s just not a very good way not very good money when you have to do that so something like confidential transactional will help right it will make amounts blind it so you don’t know how much you’re spending how much people won’t be able to see how many coins you’re actually spending that helps a lot with privacy but it’s not it’s not a perfect solution like you need some route privacy also so you can’t track coins.”

This was followed with Samson Mow speaking about Fungibility and tainted coins. He said,

“The whole idea of taint also comes into play. So the idea that some coins are dirty some are clean because some might have been used for you know on Silk Road or whatever so they’re dirty coins and some coins are cleaner. So you might want like straight off the coin base from from a mining or maybe one hop away from mining mining pools wallet or something like that but having this kind of differentiation between different coins at least theoretically is bad for the ecosystem because then your money is not sound money it’s not really good.”

The post Litecoin [LTC] creator Charlie Lee elucidates on the fungibility of Bitcoin and Litecoin appeared first on AMBCrypto.

Published at Thu, 14 Feb 2019 21:03:46 +0000

Previous Article

Senior Partner at Thompson&Stein, Artur Kuczmowski, Will Talk About AML & KYC Policies for Crypto Exchanges

Next Article

Brock Pierce on Crypto, Blockchain Gaming, Rebooting Mt. Gox, and More

You might be interested in …

Giga Watt’s Role In Crypto Mining

Giga Watt Geopolitics

In late July, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced that virtual tokens, such as those sold by the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO), are securities and therefore now subject to federal securities laws. While the SEC announcement recognized that not all blockchain-based tokens are necessarily securities — Ether is not a security, while the DAO tokens are — the announcement should be taken seriously by companies seeking to launch an initial coin offering (ICO) under U.S. jurisdiction.

Other countries have taken different regulatory approaches, on Medium, Andrew Keys, head of global business development with ConsenSys, reported that the Chinese Mint is “experimenting with the ERC 20 token standard and Ethereum smart contracts to digitize the RMB.” Keys noted that China’s  Mint “also actively promotes blockchain technology in finance and related fields.”

As of September 4, China has taken a relatively firm stance against ICOs. However, this stance might be more characteristic of the Chinese government than catastrophic. According to Chinese financial magazine, Caixin, the Chinese regulators, the People’s Bank of China and China Securities Regulatory Commission, are currently deciding on how to handle ICOs. While permanent suspension is possible, until regulations are implemented, it’s assumed that the ban is temporary.

Geopolitics of Crypto Mining

Like the ICO world, crypto mining is dominated by China. Chinese mining pools are said to control more than 70 percent of bitcoin’s total hashrate, if not more. There are two indisputable reasons for China’s dominance in the crypto mining industry. First, geopolitics: electricity in China is extremely cheap compared to other countries; and electricity costs are the most important factor in achieving a profitable mining operation. In industrial regions, electricity is either supplied by hydroelectric dams or subsidized by the government. Second, China maintains control of the majority of mining pools. The largest crypto mining pools ― collaborations where individuals or companies combine their hashrate to improve their chances of mining a block ― are all located in China.

The issue with China’s dominance in crypto mining is that combining pools in the same location could lead to centralization. If the bitcoin network becomes centralized its value as a decentralized ledger would essentially plummet. Russia and the United States do not have significant hashing power yet, but there is evidence their mining activity is growing.

The world’s first full-service mining solution provider

Nestled in Wenatchee, Washington, located close to a number of hydroelectric dams on the Columbia River, the Giga Watt Project is becoming a significant player in North American crypto mining.

Giga Watt is fueled by five megawatts of power dedicated to mining resources, with an additional 50 in development. The token-launch platform Cryptonomos supports their ambitious quest to revolutionize mining. Cryptonomos’ objective is to deliver turnkey services to Giga Watt, including token-launch structuring, book building, platform hosting, smart contract development, cybersecurity, financial management, and administration of investor and public relations. While Giga Watt’s initial token sale has ended, there is still time to join the endeavor.

To fulfill their ambitions, Giga Watt is building an enormous network. “With massive power at our disposal, we can begin issuing blockchain solutions that perform useful computing functionality. Imagining a global supercomputer that consumes a gigawatt of energy where each of our customers can participate is indeed exciting,” admitted Giga Watt CEO Dave Carlson. With such a massive power network at their disposal, Giga Watt’s mining operation could be unmatched by any other in the world.

At this time, the Giga Watt project has three units already in operation, which means that 2.25 mega watts are currently ready for tokenization, while the construction of new units continues. At the time of writing, 1.25 million WTT tokens have potential clients to whom capacities could be rented out. By September, three of Giga Watt’s state-of-the-art pods will be completed. Capacities are allocated to token holders on a first come, first served basis.

The post Giga Watt’s Role In Crypto Mining appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.