Currency
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs) (Undo revision 18556 by Dan Tobias (talk)) |
Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
* [[MintChip]] | * [[MintChip]] | ||
* [[Namecoin]] | * [[Namecoin]] | ||
+ | * [[Neos]] | ||
* [[Permacoin]] (also a [[filesystem]]) | * [[Permacoin]] (also a [[filesystem]]) | ||
* [[SolarCoin]] | * [[SolarCoin]] |
Revision as of 12:14, 5 October 2014
Various schemes to achieve entirely electronic currency, usually designed to be secure and untraceable using some sort of cryptographic technology, have been implemented. Some have gone defunct; Bitcoin is the major one currently still in use.
- Auroracoin
- Bitcoin
- Coinye
- DigiCash
- Dogecoin
- ecash
- eCache
- E-gold
- JuggaloCoin
- MazaCoin
- MintChip
- Namecoin
- Neos
- Permacoin (also a filesystem)
- SolarCoin
- Storj (another currency/filesystem scheme)
- Ven
Payment services
Not distinct currencies, but ways to move existing types of currency quickly.
See also
Links
- Proposal for a 'distributed' currency (as a Bitcoin replacement)
- British Drivers Can Pay for Parking with Chestnuts
- JP Morgan pursues Bitcoin-like patent
- How scientists taught monkeys the concept of money. Not long after, the first prostitute monkey appeared
- Native Americans adopt bitcoin clone as official currency
- Why Auroracoin will be huge
- Rep. Polis Asks Treasury To Ban Dollar Bills, Mocking Senator's Request To Ban Bitcoins
- On April Fools' Day, Stack Overflow introduced Unicoins.