Inter-chain Service Infrastructure and Protocol.
The IRIS network is an internet of blockchains intended to provide a technology foundation that facilitates construction of distributed business applications.
The IRIS network is part of the larger Cosmos network -- all zones in the network would be able to interact with any other zone in the Cosmos network over the standard IBC protocol. By introducing a layer of service semantics into the network, we are going to provide an innovative solution that enables a whole new set of business scenarios, which would result in an increase in scale and diversity of the Cosmos network.
A general purpose blockchain database for decentralized applications.
Since Bitcoin was not designed for general data usage, attempting to use the
Bitcoin style blockchain for data storage has proven to be difficult and
expensive. Bitcoin protocol limited legitimate data usage to the scale of 100
bytes per transaction - although this limit changes over time, the magnitude
stays essentially the same. This limitation was deliberately put in place at the
creation of Bitcoin, as the accommodation to data usage is a conflicting goal to
the system performance. It has been a prolonged battle and drama to raise
Bitcoin's maximum block size limit, by which evidently reflects that inherent
scalability limitation of the technology.
The scalability issues stem from the fact that, unlike previous distributed
databases, Bitcoin is an extremely redundant system. Each full node of the
Bitcoin network has a complete dataset of the Bitcoin blockchain, and must also
validate the blockchain in its entirety. To promote data usage, it would cost
even more consumption of the already-limited storage resources, and reduce
the maximum transactional throughput of the system. The high cost associated
with such extreme level of redundancy and resource straining discourages the
scaling of blockchain.
Over the years, there have been many attempts to make blockchain more
scalable. For instance, Bitcoin initially tackled the redundancy issue via a
system called light-weight validation, which cleverly organized transactions in a
merkle tree data structure, such that users can still follow the blockchain
consensus in a decentralized fashion by only using light-weight nodes. This
technique was able to significantly lower the redundancy level of the Bitcoin
network. Currently, the number of light-weight nodes far exceeds the number
of full nodes in the Bitcoin network.
Blockstream later suggested that applications may be offloaded to sidechains
[Back 2014]. In order to maintain a Bitcoin‐centric world, a pegging system to
Bitcoin was proposed in this scheme.
Besides from that, Ethereum proposed to tackle the redundancy level via
sharding. Sharding is a distributed database technique to divide a large
database into smaller ‘shards’, which is stored in different nodes. However, due
to the lessening redundancy, this system introduced a risk of reduced shards
availability. To counter this, Ethereum would likely require the existence of
several highly-available full nodes storing its whole blockchain.
A general purpose blockchain database for decentralized applications.
An infrastructure platform enabling to use cryptocurrencies in the everyday life. Paytomat opens the possibilities of the decentralized world to the wide masses
Paytomat Wallet: a complete toolkit for managing crypto
Paytomat brings financial services that modern customers eager. From exchanging your assets, to trading BEP-2 tokens or accessing dApps and games, we cover all of your wants and needs in one single app.
In-house projects and off the wall initiatives that could become future core features are documented and tested here. Scroll down to see our latest projects
An infrastructure platform enabling to use cryptocurrencies in the everyday life. Paytomat opens the possibilities of the decentralized world to the wide masses