welcome to gno.land

When I saw Gnoland for the first time, I thought it was Golang/Goland. After reading the introduction, it should be that the project side has deeply used golang development. -- Gnoland adopts a new language called Gnolang, which is a fork of Golang.

Gnoland is looking to adopt a dual-token model similar to the original idea of ​​Cosmos, where "fee utility" is stripped from the governance token.

A dual-token model using a fee token with a fixed constant inflation rate (rather than indexing like a staking token) would have the following advantages over a single-token model:

Most end-users are technically ignorant, which means that most of them don’t know which validators they should support and how to evaluate governance proposals. In short, the dual-token model mitigates operational risk by shifting governance responsibility from end users to nodes, validators, and network stakeholders who have a practical understanding of the blockchain. The purpose of governance tokens is to stake them on the network for the security of the blockchain. The irony of the single-token model is that the more traction a blockchain gains, the more likely it is to earn more tokens as gas fees, which can lead to a decrease in the security of the network. Having a dual token model solves this problem. A fixed-inflation-fee token specifically designed to power blockchain contracts will allow users to keep tokens in wallets for future use without fear of inflating their value. As a member of the cosmos ecosystem, gno.land is worth exploring.