Glyff | Project Review

Today we live in an era of increasing surveillance of digital activity and the decline of the rights of ordinary citizens to privacy on the Internet. Every year, central governments introduce new laws to monitor
digital activities and tightening existing ones. Financial authorities also regularly monitor to identify tax evasion cases. In general, governments have already become impudent in the region, and under the threat of freedom, ordinary hard workers are being milked from generation to generation until death.
Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies were conceived as a payment system independent of the states, capable of returning power to the people, created with the aim of decentralizing the financial system, when market laws are responsible for the course and pricing without the intervention of governing bodies. But with the increasing popularity of digital money, governments and law enforcement agencies around the world have begun to attempt to control public blockchains for
tracking the activities of citizens in order to collect taxes.



PRESENTATION
The real essence of blockchain and cryptocurrency is to distribute decision making powers from central authorities and big power houses through decentralisation. One of the more interesting feature of cryptocurrency is that it can't be controlled by any middle men or authorities. On platforms like Bitcoin network where the framework is peer to peer, the transfer of real value does not require the contribution of any central power, since exchanges are approved by a distributed set of miners that exist on the system. Sadly the concept of decentralization which exists as the basis of cryptocurrency has not been completely adopted in cryptocurrency exchanges. Majority of popular exchanges with massive trading volumes are designed on centralised framework rather than on decentralized framework.


The idea of chaining blocks of data together with cryptographic hashes has been around since the late 1970’s. (I will restate the cryptographic hashes simply later at the tokenization section.) The cryptographic protocols were evolving by 1982, when Ralph Merkle’s patent was granted (Ralph, 1980). The data structure named after him, the Merkle Tree, found utility in peer-to-peer systems in which peers all needed to share identical data.
There is no explicit description of the blockchains in the cited applications. But the blockchains of cryptocurrencies are well understood. As Satoshi Nakamoto writes, they are needed to enable “electronic transactions without relying on trust.” A complete, immutable public record of transactions is not a design goal in cryptocurrencies (Nakamoto, 2008). Nakamoto wrote that “To accomplish this without a trusted party, transactions must be publicly announced.” (Dai, 1998). Blockchain promises to solve this problem.

The technology at the heart of bitcoin and other virtual currencies, blockchain is an open, distributed ledger that can record transactions between two parties efficiently and in a verifiable and permanent way. The ledger itself can also be programmed to trigger transactions automatically. Bitcoin is one of the best samples but has some disadvantages. Those are Turing incompleteness, value blindness and verification time. Turing incompleteness is simply the inability to use the while and for statements. The bitcoin also has a script, but it is equipped with an OPCODE that can execute only a simple command.


The future of blockchain technology is not yet predetermined, today our world is ruled by people from the past, but they do not like all sorts of innovations. Despite the tenth anniversary, the blockchain technology is still in its infancy, but the potential for its use is enormous. Recently, more and more companies, due to the undoubted advantages of this technology, are beginning to introduce it into their business models. Technologies are developing at a rapid pace, and their implementation is hindered. It all reminds me of a Formula One car on a busy street, where traffic jams prevent me from accelerating in full.

Such decentralized ecosystems such as Ethereum promote the idea of ​​launching user programs on the blockchain, but they lack transaction privacy, that is, all actions are immediately visible in the blockchain, preventing applications from maintaining confidentiality
technologies in conditions where secrecy is of paramount importance, for example, insurance contracts, stock trading, important transactions. As a result, there is an urgent need for technology to increase privacy. This was the reason for creating a project called Glyff.


The main features of the Glyff project?

  • Private transactions with the sender, recipient, and amount transferred are completely hidden.
  • Guarant Guaranteed integrity and strong anonymity property with zero-knowledge cryptography.
  • Non-specialist programmers can develop applications that focus on privacy, even without cryptographic knowledge.
  • Enables the use of smart contracts for decentralized applications that require personal computing and secure data.
By using unique developments and adding elements of the latest cryptographic advancements to the proven Ethereum ecosystem, Glyff balances data privacy and transaction security with computational efficiency, ultimately providing a level of smart contract that is easily programmed and high performance to any application level by any company permanently maintain the basic principles of the chain. Glyff, like Ethereum, allows the development of decentralized applications, but with the main difference: the ability to hide data from computational nodes. This allows developers to enter sensitive data into their smart contracts directly on the network without compromising security.



We are building a new generation decentralized platform that enables the transfer of safe value and smart contract implementation, with complete confidentiality and with the assurance of strong truth. Glyff, like Ethereum, allows the development of decentralized applications, but with the main difference: the ability to hide data from computational nodes. This allows developers to enter sensitive data in their smart contracts, directly in the chain, without compromising security.

Personal cash transactions with the sender, recipient, and amount transferred are completely hidden. Guaranteed integrity and strong anonymity property with zero-knowledge cryptography. Provides a platform for the dissemination of cross-industry blockchain technology that meets real-world demands. Applications in Healthcare, Finance, IoT, e-Commerce, e-Governance will increase the social benefits of these sectors. Smart contract system that is easily programmed with advanced privacy features. Open source wallet application and cross platform developer framework.

Token information

Token: GLY
Token Type: ERC20

Pre-sale phase

Start date : 20 December 2018
End date : 19 January 2019
Token price : 0.11 USD
Discount :25%
Tokens for sale : 6,500,000

ICO phase

Start date : 20 February 2019
End date : 22 March 2019
Token price : 0.13 USD
Discount : None
Tokens for sale : 26,000,000

Distribution

Initial distribution: 50,000,000 GLY
TGE (including pre-sale): 32,500,000 GLY
Glyff reserve: 7,500,000 GLY
Team and early contributors: 5,000,000 GLY
Community and strategic partners: 5,000,000 GLY

Roadmap

Q2/3 2018
Research starts
Prototyping of MVP consensus node and wallet (Sprout)

Q3/4 2018
Consensus node and wallet (early release)
Private test-net launch

Q1/2 2019
Publication of the first whitepaper working draft (Sapling)
Token generation event
Development and code consolidation
Public test-net launch

Q2/3 2019
Programmable privacy
Security audit
Consensus node and wallet (stable release)

Q3/4 2019
Main-net launch
Developer toolchain and documentation
Mobile wallet (Android/iOS)


TEAM FOUNDER



For more information visit link below:

Website || Whitepaper || Telegram || Twitter || Facebook || Medium || Linkedin || Github


Author: Red devil

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