FREE PEERCOIN FAUCET PART 1
What is Peercoin?
Peercoin, also known as PPCoin or PPC, is a peer-to-peer cryptocurrency utilizing both proof-of-stake and proof-of-work systems.
Peercoin is based on an August 2012 paper which listed the authors as
Scott Nadal and Sunny King. Sunny King, who also created Primecoin, is a
pseudonym. Nadal's involvement had diminished by November 2013, leaving
King as Peercoin's sole core developer.
Peercoin was inspired by bitcoin, and it shares much of the source code
and technical implementation of bitcoin. The Peercoin source code is
distributed under the MIT/X11 software license.
Unlike bitcoin, Namecoin, and Litecoin, Peercoin does not have a hard
limit on the number of possible coins, but is designed to eventually
attain an annual inflation rate of 1%. There is a deflationary aspect to
Peercoin as the transaction fee of 0.01 PPC/kb paid to the network is
destroyed. This feature, along with increased energy efficiency, aim to
allow for greater long-term scalability.
Transactions
A peer-to-peer network handles Peercoin's transactions, balances and
issuance through SHA-256, the proof-of-work scheme (Peercoins are issued
when a small enough hash value is found, at which point the block of
transactions is added to the shared block chain. The process of finding
these hashes and creating blocks is called 'mining').
Peercoins are currently traded for fiat currencies, bitcoins, and other
cryptocurrencies, mostly on online exchanges. Reversible transactions
(such as those with credit cards) are not normally used to buy Peercoins
as Peercoin transactions are irreversible, so there is the danger of
chargebacks.
Addresses
Payments in the Peercoin network are made to addresses, which are
based on digital signatures. They are strings of 34 numbers and letters
which always begin with the letter P. One can create as many addresses
as needed without spending any Peercoins. It is quite common to use one
address for one purpose only which makes it easy to see who actually
sent the Peercoins.
Confirmations
Transactions are recorded in the Peercoin blockchain (a ledger held
by most clients), a new block is added to the blockchain with a targeted
time of 10 minutes (whenever a small enough hash value is found for the
proof-of-work scheme), a transaction is usually considered complete
after 6 blocks, or 60 minutes, though for smaller transactions, fewer
than 6 blocks may be needed for adequate security.
Creation of New Coins
New coins can be created in two different ways; mining and minting.
Mining uses the SHA-256 algorithm to directly secure the network.
Minting rewards users in proportion to the coins that they hold
(targeted at 1% annually). There are long term plans to reduce gradually
the amount of mining and to rely more on minting. This is to create a
fair distribution and could lead to an increase in the reward from
minting.
Register to FaucetHub By clicking on the Image
***FREE PEERCOIN FAUCET LIST***
________________________________________
Page2
Page3
Page4
Page5
Page6
Page7
Page8
Page9
Page10
Page11
LastPage12