Transaction

02d4b5d0b7ebd84821c30c4bcfb39d6aedfe914e40a9cd0de3ff114453960f2d
2024-03-24 22:38:44
0.00000017 BSV
(
0.00616921 BSV
-
0.00616904 BSV
)
10.17 sat/KB
1
76,605
1,670 B

2 Outputs

Total Output:
0.00616904 BSV
  • j"1LAnZuoQdcKCkpDBKQMCgziGMoPC4VQUckMŠ<div class="post">I would like to ask for some clarification on exactly what we are proposing here.&nbsp; From reading this (lengthy) thread, I gather that we are proposing:<br/><ul style="margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0;"><li>A decentralized domain registrar that maps a friendly human readable name (ie: chaord.btc) to an ip address</li><li>A parallel network bitcoin which will have it's own token currency (represent addresses).&nbsp; Rather than mining bitcoins, you mine top-level address rights.&nbsp; Is this correct?</li></ul><br/>Am I understanding all this correctly? If so, it seems as if in this brave new digital world, bitcoins (BTC) represent a commodity like gold, and domaincoins (DCC) represent real estate.<br/><br/>Lastly, I'm sure this has been discussed, but is there any way that the two system can be combined?&nbsp; Can the domaincoin system accomplish all things bitcoins can, in addition to domain registration, or no?&nbsp; IMO the best of both worlds would be if, somehow (not sure how), the domain coin system could use bitcoins as its underlying backing (or vice versa).<br/><br/>Honestly, I feel that something like DomainCoins is the "missing link" that this community is searching for.&nbsp; Because the data behind DomainCoins actually represents something (an IP address mapping), I think this could be the use-value that something like bitcoin needs to propel it to success!</div> text/html
    https://whatsonchain.com/tx/02d4b5d0b7ebd84821c30c4bcfb39d6aedfe914e40a9cd0de3ff114453960f2d