By Matt Hussey
4 min read
One of Bitcoin’s biggest flaws is its lack of anonymity. Anyone with little more than a web browser can find out what wallets are being used for. That could be a problem for people in countries where governments like to keep tabs on its citizens. That’s where Dash comes in, the cryptocurrency wants to be a currency people can buy goods and services with, but with an extra layer of anonymity that currencies like Bitcoin currently do not provide.
Dash is one of the largest of a new group of coins known as Anonymous Cryptocurrencies.
Built using the same code base as Bitcoin, Dash has its own miners, developers and wallets. However, the network’s creator made a few key changes to ensure transaction fees stay permanently low and transaction times are much faster.
Dash was launched by an American blockchain developer called Evan Duffield.
Dash has a number of interesting features.
Dash uses a similar proof-of-work mining technique found on Bitcoin. As such miners on the network verify transactions by trying to calculate a fiendishly difficult puzzle.
Dash was designed to have a total supply of 18 million coins. At its current rate, all the Dash coins will be ‘dug up’ some time in 2300.
Dash was built on the same source code as Bitcoin. That means it has a lot of the same features found on the original cryptocurrency, but with a few differences.
One of the key changes is in the types of nodes . Where as on Bitcoin all nodes are equal, Dash has special nodes called Masternodes.
Anyone can become a masternode by holding 1,000 Dash in a wallet. These nodes can perform special features regular nodes can’t and receive higher transaction fees as a result. Additionally masternodes get to vote on improvements to the network.
At its most basic level, you can buy goods and services wherever people accept the currency. However, one of the most interesting parts of Dash is the projects it funded through its own crypto fund.
In Zimbabwe, KuvaCash, a Dash-funded startup is offering an alternative to the inflation crippled national currency. The Dash community has also funded Alt Thirty Six, which provides a payments platform for the legal cannabis industry in the United States.
While Dash started out as a cryptocurrency in the US, the CEO sees its future in countries in other parts of the world.
With more than 800 merchants accepting Dash payments in Venezuela, Dash has been busy creating infrastructure and customer support teams to help bring more people to the currency.
With similar projects popping up in Zimbabwe, Dash could be one of the first coins to make a difference in the developing world.
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