I have now expanded my crypto investment, alongside $BTC (-0.34%) & $ETH (-0.79%) I have decided to add $GRT (-1.61%) into the portfolio.
I would be interested in your opinion on The Graph.
I have now expanded my crypto investment, alongside $BTC (-0.34%) & $ETH (-0.79%) I have decided to add $GRT (-1.61%) into the portfolio.
I would be interested in your opinion on The Graph.
Here is a plot showing the GRT circulation over 5 years from the launch date (i.e., December 17, 2020 at 6:00 PM):
Indexers who helped during the testnet phase also received a reward in the form of GRT equivalent to $10,000 to as much as $100,000<security:.
GRT:> Staking
In order for users to purchase shares in the nodes that run the entire platform and sell their services on the "query market," they must stake their GRT. In return, they receive financial rewards. If the indexers are malicious and, for example, intentionally modify data, this is punished expensively in the form of taking away their staked GRT tokens.
Already 2,300 Subgraphs Support the Growing Network
Recently, The Graph has been able to support indexing of data originating from Ethereum, IPFS, and PoA networks. There are more networks that the platform will support in the future. Currently, more than 2,300 subgraphs have already been deployed and developers are using them for applications. Some of these applications include Aave, Aragon, Balancer (BAL), DAOstack, Uniswap, Synthetix (SNX), and many others.
There is a lot of institutional support for The Graph (GRT) network. Michael Anderson of Framework Ventures, said in a press release that they "couldn't be happier to support Yaniv and the team. According to his statement, they look forward to helping the decentralized network and its growth.
Hayden Adams of Uniswap also shared how useful the platform has been for their analytic needs and highlights the need for The Graph's use case:
As a company, we don't manage or run our own databases. ... Right now, it's pretty difficult to get historical data from the Ethereum blockchain in an efficient way.
The Graph's long-term plan, in addition to expanding to other blockchains soon, is to transfer ownership and management of the platform to the community. This is also in response to the shift of many blockchain applications to a decentralized model of governance.
Key roles of the platform
The overall ecosystem of the platform is composed of the following individuals:
Consumers - These are the users who pay Indexer for their searches. They can also be web services or any other software connected to The Graph.
Indexers - These are the nodes that maintain the indexing function of the platform.
Curator - Using GRTs, the curators for the subgraphs identify the information that is valuable to the platform's index.
Delegator - These are other stakers who delegate their GRT to existing indexers and earn a portion of the rewards.
Fishermen - They verify that the network's response to queries is correct.
Arbitrator - They decide whether an indexer is malicious or not.
The Graph Council
The Graph plans to decentralize its management in the future. This will most likely be similar to MakerDAO and Compound (COMP). Once the protocol is ready, the team plans to create a Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) that will allow core stakeholders to participate in key protocol decisions.
Similar to other DAOs, The Graph Council, which will be the governing body for the technical parameters of the protocol, will also be responsible for how The Graph Foundation allocates its native utility tokens GRT.
Its basic functions include grant allocation and ecosystem funding decisions, protocol upgrades, protocol parameters, and other emergency decisions.
The Graph Token (GRT)
The Graph Token, or $GRT, is its native ERC-20-based token that can serve as a medium of exchange and a reward for community participants who act as indexers, curators, and delegators
GRT also have a vesting and distribution schedule that ranges from 6 months to 10 years. It is expected that approximately 12.5% of the total token supply (i.e., 1,224,999,438 GRT) will be in circulation at launch. However, this figure is exclusive of operational but locked tokens.
GRT token distribution at mainnet launch.
The Graph launched its mainnet on December 17, 2020, at 6:00 p.m. German time. At the launch, GRT were distributed to all participants in the public sale. Members of The Graph's curator program also received rewards worth an initial $1,000, with the remainder distributed to them quarterly based on their contributions to the program.
The Graph Foundation also received approximately 20% of the offering of all GRT tokens for future development of the project. In particular, contributors who want to help in the further development of The Graph can apply for their rewards program. Approximately 1% of the total GRT supply will be allocated to support these contributors in 2021.
The Graph is an indexing protocol and global API for organizing blockchain data and making it easily accessible with GraphQL. Developers can use Graph Explorer to search, find, and publish all the public data they need to build decentralized applications. The Graph Network makes it possible to build serverless dApps that run entirely on public infrastructure. GRT is the native token of the network that’s used to coordinate work. GRT is an ERC20 token. Node operators, called Indexers, stake and earn GRT for processing queries. Anyone can delegate GRT to Indexers to secure the network and earn rewards. Curators organize data on The Graph by signaling GRT on useful APIs, called subgraphs. Indexers, Delegators, and Curators work together to organize the data for the crypto economy and maintain a useful global API for DeFi and Web3.