CoinMarketCap takes a deep dive into a new blockchain-based real data protocol.
Real-time data is key to the functioning of practically every form of media there is — it’s a crucial resource for the numerous firms that rely on up-to-date data for their operations.
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What Is Streamr?
The goal of Streamr is to create an alternative model for real-time data sharing, transport and monetization where data is interconnectable and secure, while remaining in the hands of those who produce it. In this model, data flows become easily shareable and tradable, unlocking the potential for new business models to emerge that leverage and help develop efficient and scalable global data economies.
Web2’s current data infrastructures are run by big tech, and almost every company and individual in the world relies on them in some way. This potentially huge problem can only be solved one piece at a time, and Streamr co-founders Henri Pihkala and Nikke Nylund have set out to help address this by building a new form of real-time data infrastructure.
How Does Streamr Work?
Each data stream on the Streamr Network can be considered one of its basic units. Each has its own address/ENS name and pertains to a single data feed, e.g. live GPS data for cargo, a stream of tweets or a price feed. The platform allows users to buy and sell a wide range of real-time data products through the Streamr Marketplace, helping users earn a passive income.
In the Streamr Network, the data is published to individual streams that other users can subscribe to either for free or for a fee (depending on the stream). There is almost no limit on the format or quantity of data that can be fed into Streamr, as images, video or any other type of domain-specific data could be pushed into a stream.
Each stream or pub-sub topic has its own peer-to-peer overlay network that is created and maintained by a set of BitTorrent-like trackers.
Some of these include:
One-to-many (i.e. news channel or stock ticker);
Many-to-many (i.e. group chat or a multiplayer game);
One-to-one (i.e. private chat or an analytics pipeline);
Many-to-one (i.e. voting system).
There are several different roles within the Streamr Network ecosystem:
Publisher: a node through which certain data enters the network;
Subscriber: a node in the network that wants to receive messages from a stream;
Sponsor: an actor in the network who pays to secure the operation of a stream;
Broker: the mining nodes which constantly monitor which bounties are available;
- Delegator: DATA token holders who don’t want to participate in mining, but want to earn a yield on their tokens by supplying liquidity to brokers.
What Stage of Development Is Streamr In?
DATA tokens will have a variety of uses within the Streamr platform, both as a means of payment on the Streamr marketplace and for rewarding key stakeholders in the network.
What Makes Streamr Unique?
Traditional data pipelines rely on the centralized servers or cloud services that data typically flows through and stakeholders connect to. This can create vulnerable silos that suffer from vendor lock-in. With the Streamr Network, this central vulnerability is removed and replaced with secure peer-to-peer network architecture. For apps, it operates like any traditional message queue or pub/sub message broker, but underneath, the data transport service is delivered by a swarm of independently operating nodes working together to help power the network.
When combined with a companion blockchain, access to the data streams can be tokenized, enabling data content to be monetized and traded peer-to-peer without any third parties involved. The cryptocurrency Streamr DATAcoin (DATA) plays a key role in helping to power this ecosystem by providing a means of exchange between stakeholders and a strong incentive for further growth and adoption.
Existing use cases include:
- Swash: An app that lets you monetize your data as you surf the web.
- Tracey: An app to digitally record and trace seafood products in the first mile of the supply chain for greater traceability.
- Pave Motors: Decentralized ridesharing where riders trade and monetize their data.
How Does Streamr Compare With Its Competitors?
Streamr vs IOTA
The main technical difference between the Streamr Network and IOTA is that IOTA is a tangle-based distributed ledger, and Streamr is not. Instead, Streamr is an off-chain P2P network for scalable real-time data delivery in the pub/sub pattern. This makes Streamr an excellent fit for low-latency, high-throughput use cases like algorithmic trading, high-volume M2M messaging and other use cases with a lot of recipients for each message (i.e. broadcasting).
Micropayments are possible with IOTA but not Streamr, since it is not a blockchain/distributed ledger. Streamr is a companion network that deploys a blockchain for security-critical things like payments, access control and managing correctness proofs from nodes. It runs alongside other blockchains like Ethereum and xDai, but is fundamentally blockchain-agnostic and could run alongside any blockchain (with sufficient programmability).
Streamr vs Ocean
Streamr has several different components, some of which overlap with Ocean, and some of which are different. At the heart of Streamr is the Streamr Network, a P2P data transport infrastructure that mainly competes with centralized cloud infrastructure. On this core layer, there is no overlap with Ocean, the systems do completely different things.
Ocean is primarily a data marketplace that makes data sets available against payments. There is also a marketplace in the Streamr ecosystem built on top of Streamr Network and Ethereum with some overlap with Ocean's offering, but in the case of Streamr, data buyers buy real-time data, whereas on the Ocean marketplace only static data sets are available.
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