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What is Cardano ADA? ADA Cardano Explained - YouTube
Channel: Exodus
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Hey everybody, Iām Kris with Exodus.
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Weāre going to take a few minutes to explore
Cardano Ada - a project that began in 2015
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and grabbed a lot of attention not just because
of its ambitious plans to create an internet
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of blockchains, but because of its jump from
around 2 cents in late 2017 to nearly
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a dollar and 30 cents at the beginning of 2018.
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This parabolic price increase was, of course,
not sustainable, and Adaās price has since
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declined to around 3 cents as of April 2020.
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If youāre a Cardano Ada holder, at which
price did you buy?
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And What is your Cardano price prediction?
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Let us know your answer in the comments.
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So, what exactly is Cardano?
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And what is Ada?
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There isnāt one simple answer to the question
of āWhat is Cardano?ā
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First of all, Cardano and Ada are two different
things.
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Cardano is a blockchain, while Ada is a cryptocurrency
that lives on the Cardano blockchain.
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In other words, Cardano is home to the Ada
cryptocurrency.
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And while the Cardano blockchain can be used
to send and receive ADA, it will also host
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smart contracts and applications.
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Now, this may remind some of us of Ethereum
since it does the same thing.
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And in fact, Cardano shares many of its roots
with Ethereum.
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But although it is similar to Ethereum, Cardanoās
smart contract platform operates much differently.
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Letās jump right in.
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Itās not enough to simply say Ada lives
on the cardano blockchain.
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Ada is a proof-of-stake coin that fuels Cardano.
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Its purpose is to provide a quick and secure
transfer of value and to allow users to operate
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smart contracts and applications.
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The maximum supply of Ada coins that will
ever be created is capped at 45 billion.
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The current circulating supply is 31 billion
Ada coins.
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New coins enter the ecosystem and nodes validate
transactions through a consensus algorithm
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called Ouroboros Proof-of-Stake.
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Iām going throw out some technical lingo
here, but stick with me, itās not as complicated
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as it may sound.
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In this protocol, nodes who earn a position
as slot leaders generate new blocks in the
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blockchain and verify the transactions.
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In this case, Cardano slot leaders perform
functions much like Bitcoin miners do.
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Anyone holding ADA can be a stakeholder and
become a slot leader.
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You become a slot leader and publish new blocks
to the network when Cardanoās consensus
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algorithm selects a coin that you hold.
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A node is selected to generate or mint a new
block with a probability proportional to the
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amount of coins the node has.
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If a node has any amount of Ada staked, it
is called a āstakeholderā.
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If a node eventually becomes chosen to mint
a new block, it is called a āslot leaderā.
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What this simply means is the more Cardano
you hold, the greater the opportunity is to
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become a slot leader and receive rewards.
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Now that we know a little something about
Ada and its purpose, letās dive a little
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further into the Cardano blockchain.
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Cardano is being developed in two layers.
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This layered architecture is one of the key
features that makes Cardano unique.
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First is the Cardano Settlement Layer which
acts as the balance ledger and runs the transfer
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of ADA tokens.
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The other separate layer is The Cardano Computation
Layer which contains the information on why
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transactions occur.
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Itās this layer that runs Cardano smart
contracts.
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The two layers separate the ledger of account
values from the reason why values are moved
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from one account to the other.
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In other words, Ada can be transferred from
one account to another without the information
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from smart contracts going along for the ride.
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Why, because This separation enables more
flexibility for Cardano smart contracts.
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Since the computation layer is detached from
the settlement layer, users of the computation
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layer can create rules to filter transactions
based on the parameters they set.
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Such as a permissioned ledger that excludes
transactions that donāt include identification
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data ā something that will become more important
as blockchain regulation continues to increase.
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Another key feature of Cardano will be the
interoperability of blockchains.
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Think of this as the āinternet of blockchainsā
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- an ecosystem where Bitcoin can flow into Ethereum
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and Ripple can seamlessly flow into Litecoin.
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One way that Cardano wants to do this is by
implementing sidechains.
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Sidechains would enable cross-chain transfers
without any middlemen.
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Cardano supports sidechains based on a new
protocol called the KMZ sidechain.
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The KMZ sidechain protocol allows funds to
move securely from the Computation Layer to
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any blockchain that also uses the same protocol.
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With this protocol, ledgers with certain regulatory
compliances are able to interact with the
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settlement layer without having to share the
data that needs to remain private.
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Thereās a lot more to go over, but our goal
here was to provide a general overview of
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what makes Cardano different from other blockchains
and cryptocurrencies.
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If youāre a Cardano fan, let us know why
in the comments section.
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And be sure to hit the like and subscribe
buttons for a bullish year.
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