Knigtls Oath: I will guard KASPA KASPA until the end of the world.

$Knight - 100% Fair Launched, 100% Community-Driven KRC-20 Token on KASPA

Original Story

Technical Background

The DAGKNIGHT protocol has three origin gods of creation, they are Yonatan Sompolinsky, Michael Sutton, Shai Wyborski.

DAGKNIGHT  is a new ordering mechanism where instead of the 10 seconds confirmation time guaranteed by #3, the confirmation time adapts automatically by the internet speed, which means, any improvement in the network conditions of the miners and any optimization in the block validation algorithm will also speed up the confirmation time. 

By dynamically adapting block confirmation times based on real-time network conditions, DAG KNIGHT ensures faster and more efficient transaction processing, making it ideal for micropayments and small financial transactions. This means that KASPA will be suitable for time- and security-sensitive scenarios such as E-commerce transactions and traditional trading industries.

When this goal is achieved, KASPA’s throughput performance will exceed that of Bitcoin and complete coverage of small-amount online payment scenarios.

Why did we create the Green Knight Army?

To salute the three outstanding researchers at DAGKNIGHT.

Just as DAGKNIGHT stood up against 50% attacks, the Green Knight Army will also stand up when KASPA is attacked and maintain the reputation of KASPA’s world.

Michael Sutton

Core Developer. Distributed Systems Researcher and Developer,
Michael got his M.Sc in computer science from the Hebrew University, where he researched parallel algorithms and distributed systems.

Yonatan Sompolinsky

The God of DAGKNIGHT

Yonatan started gaining a reputation within the cryptocurrency academic circle back in 2013 when he and professor Zohar conceived the GHOST protocol, a protocol famous for being cited in the Ethereum whitepaper as a design goal.

Yonatan currently holds a post-doctoral position at Harvard researching transaction ordering protocols and MEV.

Shai Wyborski

Shai is a Kaspa researcher and one of the authors of the GHOSTDAG paper.
Shai is a Ph.D candidate in the Hebrew University and Ben-Gurion University where he researches classical and quantum cryptography.