Polymesh is a blockchain specifically designed for regulated assets, offering a tailored infrastructure for modern capital markets. It was developed by Polymath, a platform that facilitates the creation, issuance, and management of security tokens on the blockchain. Trevor Koverko is one of the co-founders of Polymesh. [1]
Polymesh is a permissioned blockchain designed for regulated assets, focusing on identity, compliance, confidentiality, and governance. Polymesh streamlines outdated processes and supports new financial instruments by integrating these regulatory requirements into its core design. Its specialized infrastructure offers advantages for creating and managing digital securities, addressing gaps in Ethereum's architecture to meet the needs of modern capital markets. [1][2]
Polymesh is a public, permissioned blockchain optimized for regulated assets and markets, focusing on governance, security, and consensus and providing core business logic and financial abstractions at its base layer. Built on the Substrate framework, Polymesh allows anyone to run a node to verify network rules, but only certain entities, called operators, can author and finalize blocks. The blockchain features the native token POLYX for security and payments. It supports base layer primitives and Layer 2 smart contract logic, with smart contracts compiling to WebAssembly (Wasm) and using ink!, a Rust subset designed for Substrate-based chains. [3]
Polymesh was designed specifically for regulated assets and global capital markets, guided by its four key pillars: Identity, Governance, Confidentiality, and Compliance. [3]
Identity is a fundamental aspect of Polymesh, implemented through a federated root of trust with permissioned Customer Due Diligence service providers. Every transaction on Polymesh is linked to an identity managed through decentralized identifiers (DIDs). These identities enable real-time compliance enforcement for asset issuers as assets are issued, traded, and settled and allow users to manage their on-chain identities through key management, including the ability to delegate asset management. Multiple on-chain identities can be created by an entity, helping to maintain confidentiality of overall positions. [3]
Polymesh's governance system is structured to facilitate the chain's growth and development by integrating input from the broader community, technical committees, and a governing council to implement proposals. Any network user can propose Polymesh Improvement Proposals (PIPs), including network upgrades, consensus and security parameters adjustments, and other actions. The governance mechanism is designed to become more decentralized over time. [3]
Polymesh ensures user privacy in securities transactions through confidentiality features. The MERCAT protocol was developed using homomorphic encryption and zero-knowledge proofs to enable confidential asset transfers. Future updates will integrate confidential assets into Polymesh using this protocol, with ongoing research to enhance confidentiality to support various securities use cases. [3]
Polymesh supports claim-based compliance within its base layer, allowing asset issuers to establish rules regarding the claims investors must have attached to their identities to send or receive assets. These rules can be customized and combined to create complex transfer restrictions tailored to the asset's type, jurisdiction, and regulatory requirements. [3]
Polymesh Private is a private-permissioned version of the Polymesh blockchain designed for entities needing enterprise-grade blockchain technology in controlled environments. It offers a secure platform for blockchain solutions, particularly useful in regions with unclear regulations on public Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) for regulated assets. Polymesh Private provides tokenization features with enhanced privacy and control, allowing compatibility with the public network and easy migration while ensuring compliance and access to ongoing updates and tools. [4]
Polymesh Private removes the requirement for publicly traded utility tokens, minimizing uncertainty related to operating costs and token provenance. It allows transaction fees to be set to zero or managed with a native utility token for accounting and activity tracking, providing users with flexibility in their operational models. [4]
Entities can either form consortiums or independently operate Polymesh Private instances, configuring and deploying them within a private network with restricted access. The managing entity controls on-chain governance, decides on node operators and transaction participants, and can manage governance actions through committee voting or administrative keys/multi-sig wallets. The chain operator also retains full control over the implementation of on-chain upgrades. [4]
Confidential Assets in Polymesh allow users to maintain the privacy of asset balances and transaction amounts while transacting on a shared global ledger. These assets offer features designed for regulated markets, including issuing and redeeming assets, implementing atomic settlement instructions with counterparty affirmation, involving mediators and auditors for transaction approval and oversight, and allowing issuers to freeze transfers across all accounts or specific confidential accounts. [5]
Confidential Assets on Polymesh are transferred using Settlement Instructions, which involve multiple transfer legs representing asset exchanges between a sender and receivers' confidential accounts. These instructions are executed atomically, meaning all transfers succeed or fail simultaneously once all parties affirm. Transfers can range from single asset transfers to bilateral exchanges or netted settlements. [6]
To ensure transaction validity, the sender must provide zero-knowledge proof, verify on-chain, confirm they have sufficient funds, transfer a positive amount, and that the receiver's balance will reflect the transfer. This proof is based on the sender's current encrypted balance, updated immediately for outgoing transfers and held in a pending state for incoming transfers. This system allows users to engage in multiple transactions simultaneously while managing their balances. Additionally, senders must encrypt transaction amounts for auditors and prove that these encrypted amounts match the actual transfer values. [6]
POLYX is Polymesh's native token, used for staking, governance, and transaction fees within the network. It is created through block rewards and can be held by any Polymesh key, but keys with a valid Customer Due Diligence claim can only be transferred. POLYX can be staked for block rewards, and operators may need to stake a minimum amount to run an authoring node. [7]
POLYX has no fixed maximum supply, with new tokens minted at the end of each era to reward operators and stakers as part of the Proof of Stake consensus protocol. The Rewards Curve governs the minting rate, capped at 140 million POLYX annually. Rewards for operators and stakers on Polymesh fluctuate based on the amount of POLYX being staked. The ideal staking ratio is 70% of the total POLYX supply but can be adjusted through governance. When the staking ratio is below this target, rewards are higher to attract more stakers; once the ratio is met, rewards decrease exponentially, incentivizing unstaking and providing additional liquidity. [8]
편집자
편집 날짜
August 18, 2024
POLYX
USD
POLYX
USD
$0.346098
4.56%
$383,853,991.00
4.53%
$386,798,084.82
4.53%
$63,812,149.15
5.08%
$0.346098
4.56%
$383,853,991.00
4.53%
$386,798,084.82
4.53%
$63,812,149.15
5.08%