Difference between revisions of "IExec RLC (RLC)"
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Revision as of 08:53, 23 January 2022
Type | Blockchain Based Cloud Platform |
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Total supply | 86,999,785 RLC |
Basics
- Founded in:
- Mainnet release:
- Based in:
- Not mineable
- Network Layer, one of the building blocks on top of the Ethereum blockchain.
- iExec is a decentralized cloud computing platform and data marketplace built on the Ethereum blockchain. It combines the ability to rent out excess computing power with a DApp and data marketplace for developers to monetize their products.
- On May 15th iExec released iExec V3, introducing a new Data Wallet that makes secure data renting possible. For the very first time, individuals can connect to iExec and contribute their computing power to earn money. iExec has also launched its Enterprise Edition for corporates wishing to do business with blockchain.
History
Token
Launch
- 1 round, on 19-4-2017 which collected 12.148.963USD. Or 10.000BTC in >3h. It was the 5th biggest ICO back then.
Token allocation
- From their Tokenomics blog (22-10-2019):
"All the 87 millions RLC that will ever be minted, were done so on the day of the crowd sale. And there will never be any more RLC tokens. There is no “admin access” to the RLC ERC20 smart contract, meaning the total supply is written in stone, and can never change. Apart from the contingency that is being locked indefinitely (less than 8%), all the other tokens are free to change hands. Even if you add to this the portion of tokens that the project holds, that’s still ~80% of “free to circulate” supply."
Utility
- iExec uses the RLC token, on the Ethereum blockchain for its consensus protocol for all transactions on the Marketplace. More on the technical details here.
Token Details
Stablecoin
Tech
- Whitepaper can be found [insert here].
- Code can be viewed [insert here].
- Built on: Ethereum, ERC20
- Programming language used:
Transaction Details
How it works
- Their consensus system is called Proof-of-Contribution (PoCo).
Mining
Staking
- From their Tokenomics blog (22-10-2019):
"It is a requirement for any worker part of the public pool that wants to monetize its computing power. The stake is locked up as a type of ‘security deposit’ as an incentive as to prevent bad actors in the network. The stake contributes to reducing the circulating supply, yet it has been primarily designed to enhance the security of the platform.
Currently, the stake locked up during each contribution is equal to 30% of the computing cost (or worker’s reward for the task). That sets the minimum stake amount a worker should have. But if he wants to be able to cope with computation spikes, churn rate, payment lockups, there is a high level of chance that he decides to adopt a much higher stake. All in all, we estimate that this will represent around 5% of the total supply."
- They go more into detail on their staking decisions for PoCo in this blog post (8-12-2017).
Liquidity Mining
Different Implementations
Interoperability
Sidechain
- From their Tokenomics blog (22-10-2019):
"The next iteration of the iExec platform: iExec V4, to be released around the end of the year, will include an initial implementation of a sidechain. Without going into the details of how this sidechain will function, here are the two key takeaways regarding its effect on the RLC tokenomics:
- Any exchange of cloud resources happening on the sidechain will be settled in RLC. That is totally aligned with the current state on mainnet.
- Transaction validators of the sidechain will have to stake RLC.
Without fundamentally changing them, the sidechain will improve the current tokenomics. The sidechain, however, is only an initial implementation and these mechanisms may not be the final version."
Other Details
Privacy Method being used
Compliance
Oracle Method being used
Has been talking (6-2019) about creating decentralized oracles.
- "iExec DOracle relies on the iExec cloud executing the off-chain logic before returning certified results to the blockchain. Certification is achieved using an on chain consensus (iExec’s PoCo consensus protocol) in order to ensure that the results of a DOracle execution can be trusted for the on-chain settlement of off-chain events."
- From this post:
"fetch the price of any crypto pair (ex: ETH/USD) from an API on the internet and put it back into a smart contract on the Ethereum Blockchain. Such a mechanism is called a price feed oracle and is one of the many use cases enabled by iExec’s decentralized cloud."
- They go further into their oracles in this article (24-9-2021):
"The market share iExec is pursuing is in exotic data (i.e. non-price data). If the iExec Oracle Factory manages to execute the way it’s intended to execute, it fills a need in the market. In addition, when it comes to off-chain computing and oracles, the most promising technological innovations are hardware enclaves. With iExec offering the ability to deploy ‘trusted’ oracles using TEE hardware enclave technology. iExec has a unique first-mover advantage. TEE is extremely important for owners of valuable APIs or data (potentially containing confidential data) who wish to monetize these resources through iExec. In the case of monetizing decentralized oracles, it is important the API key is not leaked. With the Oracle Factory, any oracle can be created from any API. Contrast that with that of our competition, which offers general oracles that are limited to popular data."
On the difference with Chainlink's doracles, from a iExec slack user:
- "One of the things i find that gives doracles a huge advantage is that its a lot more API provider friendly since providers can sell their api access directly to whitelisted workerpools via the encrypted dataset feature and actually get paid per request with no middleman. But with the other oracle project(link) each node needs a separate API key so in essence each node is just reselling private API data as a middleman. At first i was a fan of the separate api way as it seems more decentalized but after a dev explained how iexec can manage multiple different api keys and keep the keys encrypted via datasets i found the iexec way a lot more neater, "legal", and business friendly."
- Or as in iExec it's own words:
"Secure storage of API keys used to fetch data. Chances are that the API is protected by a key/token. You would not want to leak the key you paid for, right? We have you covered. Keys can be stored and encrypted, and you can even start earning RLC with your API key by listing it on the iExec’s Data Wallet (ensure reading the API TOS before)."
- Chainlink and iExec actually work together (31-1-2020). Their first use case that they aim to tackle will be decentralised car insurance.
Their Other Projects
iExec for Enterprise
- From their Tokenomics blog (22-10-2019):
"In parallel to building the infrastructure on the Ethereum public mainnet, we identified the need to bring the iExec stack into the hands of corporate users, which led to the creation of iExec for Enterprise. There have been open discussions about how this relates to the publicly deployed version. These both serve the same goal: the growth of the iExec platform. As it is likely that enterprise customers and consortium won’t directly transact on mainnet, one condition we envision in order to gain access to the iExec Enterprise edition would be to stake RLC tokens. That would be fundamental to ensure that each new customer on-boarded would contribute to the RLC tokenomics."
DEX
Governance
DAO
Self Funding Mechanism
Upgrades
Roadmap
As of 8-2019 the following is planned:
- 12-2019;
iExec 4.0 — High Performance Computing
This version allows miners to join the iExec market network providing true supercomputing capabilities.
- 31-5-2020;
iExec 5.0 — Beyond the Decentralized Cloud
The goal of this version is to allow new usages of iExec beyond the Decentralized Cloud. This will be a clear step further in blockchain computing, as dapps will be fully autonomous applications, able to provision resources, data, and applications directly from the blockchain in a fully decentralized way. This will open the market network to new applications specifically deployed to take advantage of IoT, Fog/Edge Computing, and Smart City technologies.
- It claims it has fulfilled its whitepaper and has a new (22-10-2020) 'adoption roadmap'
Audits
- Bug bounty program can be found [insert here]. None according to Blockchain Security DB (29-6-2020), which does show 2 audits (latest in 5-2018).
Bugs
Usage
Projects that use or built on it
DApps on iExec
- On their website they have a blog called DApps of the week which showcases DApps built on iExec. So far (8-2019) there have been 9 editions.
Competition
Coin Distribution
- From their Tokenomics blog (22-10-2019):
"The share held by holders is currently averaging around ~90%, which is very high. In reality, it is slightly lower as tokens on exchanges’ wallets are not represented on the chart (which explains why the total number of tokens appears to fluctuate). So if we consider that 50% of tokens on the exchanges are “on hold”, that would make the current total percentage of holders to ~75%. Still rather substantial."
Pros and Cons
Pros
Cons
Team, Funding, Partnerships, etc.
Team
- Full team can be found here.
- Fedak, Gilles; CEO & Co-founder “Dr. habil. Gilles FEDAK is a permanent INRIA research scientist since 2004 at ENS-Lyon, France. After receiving his Ph.D degree from University Paris Sud in 2003, he followed a postdoctoral fellowship at University California San Diego in 2003-2004. His research interests are in Parallel and Distributed Computing, with a particular emphasis on the problematic of using large and loosely coupled distributed computing infrastructures to support highly demanding computational and data-intensive Science. He produced pioneering software and algorithms in the field of Grid and Cloud Computing that allow people to easily harness large parallel systems consisting of thousands of machines distributed on the Internet (XtremWeb, MPICH-V, BitDew, SpeQulos, Xtrem-MapReduce, Active Data, …). He co-authored about 90 peer-reviewed scientific papers and won two Best Paper awards. In 2012, G. Fedak co-edits with C. Cérin the Desktop Grid Computing Book, (CRC publication). In 2015, he receives the Chinese Academy of Sciences PIFI Award.”
- He, Haiwu; Chief scientist, co-founder “Pr Haiwu HE is a 100 Talent Professor at the CNIC (Computer Network Information Center), Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. He is a Chunhui Scholar of Ministry of Education of China since 2013. Prof. Haiwu HE received his M. Sc. and Ph. D. degrees in computing from the University of Sciences and Technologies of Lille, France, respectively in 2002 and 2005. He was a postdoctoral researcher at Inria Saclay, France in 2007. He was a research engineer expert at Inria Rhone-Alpes in Lyon, France from 2008 to 2014. He has published about 30 refereed journal and conference papers. His research interest covers P2P distributed system, Cloud computing, BigData.“
- Jean-Charles Cabelguen; iExec’s Head of Innovation and Adoption
- Oleg Lodygensk; CTO
Funding
Partners
- One of the sponsors (3-10-2019) of Hyperledger Avalon. (iExec is one of the main participants in this project and many of the bellow named organisations are also apart of Avalon)
- Partnered with Intel, Ubisoft and RSK.
- Released (2018) in collaboration with Intel: the easiest way to build a blockchain application with end-to-end data encryption within a Trusted Execution Environment (TEE)
- IBM Joins iExec as Cloud Resource Provider: allowing enterprises to run their most sensitive workloads on shared hardware. An IBM workerpool has been made available for customers to use on iExec’s decentralized cloud Marketplace.
- iExec has been a member of EEA and a chairman for the trusted compute group since 2017
- "The world’s fifth largest electrical company has announced a partnership with Ethereum app iExec that will involve the company utilizing the decentralized application (DApp) in a project test.
EDF, which operates a $33 billion market capitalization, has launched GPUSH on iExec, a visual simulator software that is now available through the DApp operator. EDF reports that launching there program through a DApp gives them access to the Ethereum Mainnet, which, among other things, will allow them to test the software in the context of a blockchain.
GPUSH involves a simulation software for modeling fluid behavior, which EDF plans to use to study and evaluate the effects of hydroelectric dams and other sources of liquid-based energy. In particular, the company is looking to Ethereum’s mainnet and the feature of blockchain to see if it is able to improve upon the simulator, compared to the standard GPU computing platform."
- This article lists the following partnerships (2-4-2020):
- Chainlink (Source)
- Genesis Cloud (Source)
- IBM Cloud (Source)
- H7 (Source)
- Alibaba Cloud (Source)
- BPI France (Source)
- Scontain (Source)
- Shift (Source)
- Fortanix (Source)
- TFCloud (Source)
- Nerdalize (Source)
- Intel (Source)
- RSK (Source)
- Ubisoft (Source)
- Cloud & Heat (Source)
- Stimergy (Source)
- OpenFog (Source)
- Enterprise Ethereum Alliance (EEA) (Source)
- Kaiko and iExec have partnered (7-4-2020) to launch a secure DeFi price feed that is ready for use today by any Ethereum smart contract.
- Partnered with OntoChain (6-11-2020). "the EU project funding 4.3m euros for blockchain innovators. With OntoChain, iExec will be offering EU-funded grants for projects to build on iExec stack." <infobox>
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