Skip to main content

Token Overload Is Causing Confusion

Token Overload Is Causing Confusion

With thousands of cryptocurrency tokens tradable on exchanges, and thousands more registered as ERC20s, confusion is inevitable. Many share extremely similar names and some have identical abbreviations. On Wednesday, one token pumped by 300% after a group of traders mistakenly bought it, thinking they were purchasing a different asset entirely.

Also read: Canadian Multinational Bank BMO Blocks Cryptocurrency Transactions

The Cryptoconomy Is Drowning in Tokens

The number of different tokens in existence is debatable, with estimates ranging from a couple of thousand to over 80,000. All that can be agreed on is it’s a lot, and the number is mushrooming with every passing month. Coinmarketcap lists over 1,500 coins and tokens, there’s another 12,000 that have launched on the Waves platform plus more than 68,000 tokens that exist on Ethereum. Most of these latter tokens haven’t launched, but their mere creation via smart contract is enough to sow confusion. There are 20 ERC20 variants of the petro alone.

On Wednesday, Suppoman, a Youtuber with over 140,000 subscribers, shilled Matrix Network (MAN), prompting many of his followers to rush off and buy the token. Unfortunately, several of them bought the wrong coin and mistakenly snapped up Matryx (MTX). As a result, MTX, which has a market cap of just $15 million, soared in price by 300% before rapidly correcting once investors realized their error.

Token Overload Is Causing Confusion

“Suppoman shills Matrix and his ever-so-bright viewers pumped Matryx instead,” laughed Crypto Jack, another popular Youtuber, reading out comments from his Telegram channel. “I bought 50,000 [Matryx] yesterday and [it] dropped 100% today,” complained someone in the Matryx Telegram group. This wasn’t the first case of mistaken token identity and it won’t be the last.

Too Many Tokens, Not Enough Tickers

Token Overload Is Causing ConfusionThe most confusing tokens of all aren’t those with similar names, but those with identical tickers. When bitcoin cash launched, some exchanges listed it as BCC, but others went with BCH because bitconnect already traded under BCC. In the end, BCH stuck, unlike bitconnect which didn’t stick around for much longer.

As Vitalik Buterin pointed out, the number of available cryptocurrency codes is limited to just over 17,000. For ICOs trying to find an unclaimed abbreviation, this presents a problem. Their options are either to pick a long but unique name such as Ethorse (HORSE) or hope that their project will dwarf the existing coin with the same abbreviation. Coinmarketcap lists Bitcoin Lightning (BLT), for instance, alongside the better known Bloom (BLT), coins which were listed within 10 days of one another in January.

In some respects, the race for coveted three-letter abbreviations is much like the race for domain names during the dot-com boom. Many of the several thousand tokens in existence won’t survive, and a good few have fallen by the wayside already. They remain, though, on sites such as Coinmarketcap as a reminder of the abbreviation they once claimed. Until these tokens are officially declared dead and delisted, they will continue to cause confusion.

Have you ever gotten mixed up due to tokens that share the same abbreviation? Let us know in the comments section below.


Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Coincodex, and Telegram.


Need to calculate your bitcoin holdings? Check our tools section.

The post Token Overload Is Causing Confusion appeared first on Bitcoin News.



from Bitcoin News http://bit.ly/2uB60Ii

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Deep Web Roundup: Dream Adds Monero and Bitcoin Tumbler “Chip Mixer” Launches

The darknet has been quiet of late, which is the way it’s meant to be. No news means no mega busts, honeypots, or mass market shutdowns. Even when it’s out of the spotlight though, the deep web is quietly making news, whether trialling the latest privacy coins or the newest coin mixers that promise to restore a little of the privacy that’s being stripped away from bitcoin users on a daily basis. Also read: U.S. Agency ICE Conducts Investigations That Exploit Blockchain Activity The Battle for Privacy Heats Up Privacy is all relative, but of late there’s been relatively little privacy to be enjoyed by bitcoin users. Blockchain monitoring software is becoming more sophisticated and more common, with U.S. law enforcement agencies using it to profile and hunt down deep web users. Chip Mixer is a relatively new bitcoin tumbler that’s designed to restore some of that privacy. Available on both the clearnet and darknet, the service uses a variety of techniques to obfuscate blockchain m...

International Crypto Exchange Luno Adds Bitcoin Cash Trading

Luno exchange has added bitcoin cash trading to the platform following feedback from its client base. BCH is now only the third cryptocurrency available for trading on the exchange, in addition to BTC and ETH , but more options could be on the way once Luno determines that they are credible enough. Also Read: Bitflyer Adds Bitcoin Cash Trading Across Europe and the US Luno Adds Bitcoin Cash Trading Luno, the London-headquartered company formerly known as Bitx, recently announced that bitcoin cash was made available on its cryptocurrency exchange. Starting from Monday, September 23, customers at Luno are now able to store, buy and sell BCH on the platform. The reason given for adding BCH to the exchange is feedback from users in developing markets that convinced Luno to expand their offering from previously just BTC and ETH . Marcus Swanepoel, CEO of Luno, said , “We are in a new and exciting financial era. Developing economies are leading the large-scale adoption and appli...

Ombudsman Receives Complaints About Crypto Investments in Spain

The Spanish ombudsman has been receiving complaints about cryptocurrency and how some Spanish citizens investing in these vehicles have lost everything. In his annual report, Angel Gabilondo recognized the rise of cryptocurrencies as a new problem due to the little or no regulation crypto sees in the country. In the same way, the EU has also warned about these assets recently. Spanish Ombudsman Gives His Take on Crypto Angel Gabilondo, the Spanish ombudsman, has given his take regarding cryptocurrencies and the effects they have on citizens investing in some of these projects. Gabilondo said in his yearly report that cryptocurrencies have become “a new problem” during the year examined, with many people having lost all of their funds invested. The report states : Cryptocurrency exchange companies or platforms are not regulated in the legal system, are not subject to any public supervision system, nor do they benefit from deposit guarantee systems. The affected users that sought...