Difference between revisions of "Platform"
From Obyte Wiki
(added section on stress testing) |
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==Classification== | ==Classification== | ||
− | The distinction of "asset in the financial world = token in the non-financial world" is not always easy to make. For example, with | + | The distinction of "asset in the financial world = token in the non-financial world" is not always easy to make. For example, with personal tokens, "Kisses by Deb" are clearly not likely to be sold for much money, but how about "Plumbing Minutes by Joe Silverman", a qualified plumber, who normally charges $1 a minute for his labour? |
==Existing== | ==Existing== | ||
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* [[Fun-coins]] | * [[Fun-coins]] | ||
* [[Family tokens]] | * [[Family tokens]] | ||
+ | * [[Personal tokens]] | ||
* [[Social tokens]] | * [[Social tokens]] | ||
* [[Commercial tokens]] | * [[Commercial tokens]] |
Revision as of 20:56, 26 April 2018
This article is mainly about coins/assets/tokens on the Byteball platform in addition to its native currencies of bytes and blackbytes.
Stress-tests
Any platform must be continually stress-tested, with defects repaired in a timely manner. See the wiki article Antifragility.
Classification
The distinction of "asset in the financial world = token in the non-financial world" is not always easy to make. For example, with personal tokens, "Kisses by Deb" are clearly not likely to be sold for much money, but how about "Plumbing Minutes by Joe Silverman", a qualified plumber, who normally charges $1 a minute for his labour?
Existing
To date, we have descriptions and articles about:
- Fun-coins
- Family tokens
- Personal tokens
- Social tokens
- Commercial tokens
- TitanCoin
- ICO bot
Future
- Local currencies[1]
- Accounting and tax implications of non-trivial social tokens