Tenderdash, consensus, Merkle trees & efficiency

In this episode, we talk to Ivan Shumkov and Samuel Westrich, developers of Dash Core Group (DCG) working on Tenderdash aka Dashevo, a fork of Tendermint, Core (BFT Consensus) in Go. Dash has developed a consensus, which is a fork of Tendermint - Tenderdash. Tenderdash handles state transition ordering, block creation and network communications to the platform, while the Dash Platform Protocol ensures the consistency and integrity of the data itself. Ivan’s Twitter Samuel’s Twitter We spoke to the devs about Tenderdash, and: Traveling & Cultural challenges China & crypto Mt. Gox Volatility & first txs Threshold cryptography Signatures & quorum Tenderdash Metadata & logic Verification & data contracts Data structures & Merkle trees Pizza & blocks Efficiency & computations SDK's & smart contracts Motivation & fun Grandmother & toys Coinjoin App specific blockchains IBC Masternodes Bounties & devs If you like what we do at Citizen Cosmos: Stake with Citizen Cosmos validator Help support the project via Gitcoin Grants Listen to the YouTube version Read our blog Check out our GitHub Join our Telegram Follow us on Twitter Sign up to the RSS feed Special Guests: Ivan Shumkov and Samuel Westrich.Links:AgoricBitcoinCosmosCosmwasmDarkcoinDashDo KwonGoogleGoogle firebaseIBCLocalbitcoinsMt. GoxMysqlPornhubSilkroadTendermintTerraVenmo

Om Podcasten

Citizen Web3 provides infrastructure services as a validator across the blockchain space. It is one of the oldest web3 podcasts in the space and a community of like-minded people. Our flagship product (in the making): www.validatorinfo.com is a dashboard and an explorer that helps you to discover validators across the space. We believe in the power of decentralized communities and the potential of blockchains to build a better world. For us blockchains are not just digital technologies, but they are similar to natural hives, forests, and patterns in the environment that allow us to communicate better. We value security, decentralization, privacy, and lack of enforcement. Open and verifiable blockchains should be viewed as digital nations and that our role is to help build and bring value to these nations.