Hypersyn: A Peer-to-Peer System for Mutual Credit
Lum Ramabaja

TL;DR
Hypersyn introduces a peer-to-peer mutual credit system that operates without blockchain or consensus algorithms, allowing scalable, trust-based exchanges of credit as a form of elastic money, enhancing autonomy and self-organization.
Contribution
It presents a novel permissionless, scalable mutual credit protocol that does not rely on distributed ledgers or validators, fundamentally changing peer-to-peer payment systems.
Findings
Does not require consensus algorithms or distributed ledgers
Supports elastic money supply based on mutual credit
Enables scalable, trust-based peer-to-peer exchanges
Abstract
The Hypersyn protocol is a new type of permissionless and peer-to-peer payment network that is based on the concept of mutual credit and mutual arbitrage. Unlike blockchain-based systems, Hypersyn does not rely on any consensus algorithm. It does not require a distributed ledger to store the history of events nor a set of validators. Hypersyn does not have a system-imposed hard-cap on the number of transactions per second that it can perform, and can therefore easily scale up or down depending on network usage. Unlike in other payment systems, money in Hypersyn does not get transferred from person to person in the conventional sense. Instead of transferring a token between each other, peers in Hypersyn change their exchange value of their credit (i.e. their purchasing power) within the network. Just as in centrally-issued fiat systems, money in Hypersyn is treated as freely…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlockchain Technology Applications and Security · Peer-to-Peer Network Technologies · Digital Platforms and Economics
