Book of Kek
  • The Book of Kek
  • Resources & Links
  • How to Contribute to the Book of Kek
  • Pepe News Outlet đź“°
    • Pepe News Outlet Rules
  • Chapter 1 - Historical Lore
    • The Creator: Matt Furie
    • The Creation: Pepe the Frog
      • Birth of Pepe the Frog
      • Birth of The Meme
        • Memes as cultural drivers
      • 4chan & the Sad Frog
      • Pepe the alt-right Frog
      • Reclaiming Pepe
      • "Feels Good Man" - Pepe documentary
      • Famous normie Pepe posts
      • Types of Pepes
  • Chapter 2 - The Rare Pepe Project
    • Pepe's Blockchain Beginnings
    • The Rare Pepe Blockchain Project
      • The Rare Pepe Directory
      • Rare Pepe Valuation
      • Rare Pepe Scientists
      • Most Famous Rare Pepe Artists
      • Unique Rare Pepe Sets
      • Famous Rare Pepe Cards
      • Series & Card Specific Lore
        • Series 1
        • Series 2
        • Series 3
        • Series 4
        • Series 5
        • Series 6
        • Series 7
        • Series 8
        • Series 9
        • Series 10
        • Series 12
        • Series 13
        • Series 15
        • Series 16
        • Series 17
        • Series 18
        • Series 19
        • Series 20
        • Series 21
        • Series 22
        • Series 23
        • Series 24
        • Series 25
        • Series 26
        • Series 27
        • Series 28
        • Series 29
        • Series 30
        • Series 31
        • Series 32
        • Series 33
        • Series 34
        • Series 35
        • Series 36
      • Official Rare Pepe Sub Assets
      • Artists & Collectors Interviews
        • Collector Interview: TokenAngels
      • Famous Rare Pepe auctions
      • “The Rarest Book” by Eleonora Brizi
    • Fake Rares & Commons
      • Fake Rare Artists
      • Fake Rares Submission Rules
      • Fake Rares Card Specific Lore
      • Fake Commons
        • Fake Commons Submission Rules
  • Dank Rares
    • Dank Rares Submission Rules
  • Historical Counterparty Projects
    • Penisium Project
  • Chapter 3 - Blockchain, Counterparty, How to
    • Introduction to Bitcoin NFTs
    • Counterparty - What is it?
      • The Counterparty DEX
      • Why use Counterparty?
    • What is PEPECASH?
    • Best Pepe Wallets
    • Creator Onboarding to XCP
      • 1. Create a Counterparty (XCP) wallet
      • 2. Buy XCP from a dispenser
      • 3. Create Named Token
      • 4. Upload Art to EasyAsset
      • 5. Update Token Description
      • 6. Increase Supply
      • 7. Lock Supply
      • 8. Submit To Directories
    • How to Buy Rares, Fakes & Danks
      • How to Buy Rare Pepes
    • Dispensers: What are they? How to use them?
    • Scarce.city
    • Emblem Vault
      • How to create an Emblem Vault
      • Vaulting Rare Pepes in ERC-1155 Tokens
  • Chapter 4 - latest developments
    • Pepe.wtf
    • PepePawnShop
      • How It Works
    • Pepe Inc.
    • Notable Pepes
      • How It Works
        • The Collector's Journey
        • The Artist's Journey
      • FAQ
      • The Notable Ones - Interviews
        • PEPENARDO
        • DANGIUZ
        • CARSONATED
    • PegzDAO, Chain/Saw & RarePepe.fun
    • Rare Apepes
    • Pepes in Paris 2023
      • Fest Rares Cards
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  1. Chapter 3 - Blockchain, Counterparty, How to
  2. Counterparty - What is it?

Why use Counterparty?

Counterparty is basically an early version of Ethereum which was built on top of the Bitcoin blockchain as a protocol whose transactions get settled with BTC while paying fees to the Bitcoin miners. It was most likely abandoned because it scales really poorly. But in the summer of 2021, when the NFT mania was at its peak and Ethereum was dealing with ridiculously high fees, bitcoiners remembered about Counterparty and seized the low demand for Bitcoin block space to bring some old art back to life.

While some will discourage the use of Counterparty and recommend Raretoshi on Liquid or RGB Spectrum on the Lightning Network, the reality is that none of these are as secure or as decentralized as the Bitcoin blockchain. Also, none of them is guaranteed to live for as long as the base layer itself. And since there are lots of collections which exist on Bitcoin, there will be collectors to acquire an interest in them. The goal is clearly not to “scale”, but to grant the highest security and longevity to assets.

Counterparty has been pronounced “dead” many times before, but it made a couple of comebacks specifically because it’s built on Bitcoin and requires minimal maintenance – the assets will always exist and they’re secured by a global network of miners and full nodes, so it’s only the user interfaces (wallets) that need improvement from time to time. Your NFTs may cost more to create and transfer (as compared to centralized platforms like Liquid and Ethereum), but they are also safer because shutting the network is virtually impossible.

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Last updated 3 years ago