Breaking the Chain – Directed Acyclic Graph (“DAG”) challenges Blockchain’s dominance

The FinTech industry has undoubtedly seen an incredible rise in recent years. With new technology comes as a great deal of jargon and industry-specific phrases, and this can make aspects of the sector difficult to understand. Seeing phrases like “blockchain” and “Distributed Ledger Technology” (DLT) can put you off if you don’t have any idea what they are.

Perhaps one of the key mistakes make here is that blockchain and DLT are considered to be synonyms. But this isn’t entirely the case; in reality, blockchain is DLT, but not all DLT is block chain. Let’s explain this further.

A Chip off the Old Block

Blockchain first hit our screens via Bitcoin, an early player in the DLT market. Bitcoin announced blockchain as the basis of its operation. In his now-legendary paper, Satoshi Nakamoto explained how Bitcoin would completely change aspects of financial services by utilising a public distributed digital ledger to register, via a series of blocks, a chain of transactions each confirmed by participants known as “miners”.

This was the true beginning of blockchain in 2008. Since then, other notable players, such as Ethereum, Monero and many others, have also employed the blockchain framework to effectuate their business models. As such, the term “blockchain” has come to be a household name. Blockchain, however, is only one technology operating within the DLT framework.

Since it began operating, the blockchain model has faced growing difficulties. Two of the largest challenges blockchain faces are its inability to handle a large volume of transactions simultaneously and its high transaction fees. Opportunity has been envisaged and competition has sprung. The result? This has led to the rise of another player in this technology. It is known as Directed Acyclic Graph, or “DAG”.

DAG versus Blockchain

DAG is, like blockchain, composed of a network with a number of different nodes confirming transactions. Each new transaction that is submitted requires the confirmation of at least two earlier transactions before it is successfully recorded onto the network.

As more transactions are submitted, more transactions are confirmed and entered, resulting in a distributed web of doubly-confirmed transactions.

Unlike the blockchain model, however, DAG does not require miners to authenticate its transactions. By having two “parent transactions” confirm the validity of a subsequent transaction, human intervention becomes dispensable resulting in a vastly accelerated process: not requiring miners’ confirmation means transactions go through almost instantaneously.

Additionally, if there are no miners, there are no miners’ fees, helping to keep actual transaction fees to a minimum. It is also worth noting that this low-fee structure opens itself to another important feature; DAG’s ability to process micro transactions.

Directed Acyclic Graph Examples

IOTA is one of the more prominent examples of Directed Acyclic Graph, incorporating the framework through the use of its own aptly-named “Tangle” protocol.

Hashgraph is another contemporary entity which utilises DAG. Its protocol, “Gossip”, differs slightly to that of IOTA. The Gossip protocol is every bit as chatty as its name suggests; each network node transfers the information they have to other nodes in the network. It is from this string of ongoing confirmations that the distributed ledger is then created.

DAG is proving to be a fitting challenger to blockchain as it ventures to address the flaws identified in blockchain. Of course we do expect other challengers to follow, and it is perhaps still too early to ascertain whether DAG will prevail, but it is certainly one to watch out for. In such a fast-paced and novel industry, new ideas and frameworks will strive to lead the charge. Could DAG make its way to the top, or will blockchain continue to lead the way?

Only time will tell.