Litecoin
DEFINITION of Litecoin
Launched in the year 2011, Litecoin is an alternative cryptocurrency based on the model of Bitcoin. Litecoin was created by an MIT graduate and former Google engineer named Charlie Lee. Litecoin is based on an open source global payment network that is not controlled by any central authority. Litecoin differs from Bitcoins in aspects like faster block generation rate and use of scrypt as a proof of work scheme.
Litecoin
Litecoins were launched with the aim of being the “silver” to Bitcoin’s “gold,” and have gained much popularity since the time of inception. Litecoin is a peer-to-peer internet currency. It is a fully decentralized open source, global payment network. Litecoin was developed with the aim to improve on Bitcoin’s shortcomings, and has earned industry support along with high trade volume and liquidity over the years. The broader differences between the two cryptocurrencies are listed in the table below.
|
Bitcoin |
Litecoin |
Creation |
2009 |
2011 |
Creator |
Satoshi Nakamoto |
Charles Lee |
Coin Limit |
21 Million |
84 Million |
Block Generation Time |
10 Minutes |
2.5 Minutes |
Algorithm |
SHA-256 |
Scrypt |
Initial Reward |
50 BTC |
50 LTC |
Current Block Reward (as of June 2014) |
25 BTC |
50 LTC |
Rewards |
Halved every 210,000 blocks |
Halved every 840,000 blocks |
Difficulty Retarget |
2016 Block |
2016 Block |
Litecoin is designed to produce four times as many blocks as Bitcoin (1 new block every 2.5 minutes to Bitcoin’s 10), and it also allows for 4x the coin limit, making its main appeal over Bitcoin to do with speed and ease of acquisition. However, because Litecoin uses scrypt (as opposed to Bitcoin’s SHA-2) as a proof-of-work algorithm, the use of mining hardware such as ASIC miners or a GPU mining rig requires significantly more processing power.
Litecoin is consistently among the largest cryptocurrencies in terms of market capitalization (though still remaining far below that of Bitcoin) and it currently has more than 50 million coins in circulation.