Electronic Dollar (EDL) - Scam or Other Issues | Coinopsy
Electronic Dollar (EDL) - Dead Coins

Electronic Dollar (EDL)

Electronic Dollar was founded in 2018, it is not trading on any exchanges. Electronic Dollar was added to the dead coins list due to being Scam or Other Issues. Founder/CEO is Unknown.

Summary

  • Main reasons for dead coin listing Scam or Other Issues.
  • Started 2018, Ended 2018.
  • Social media ended 2019.
  • Trading ticker (EDL).
  • Total coins unknown.
  • Not available to trade on any exchanges.
  • Was built on standalone blockchain.
  • Website is down.
  • The Founder/SEO is Unknown.

Further Details

Notes

Scam coin and Website down.

Links

https://web.archive.org/web/20180812113552/https://edollar.cash/ https://www.facebook.com/edollar.cash https://twitter.com/EdollarCash

Screenshot

Screenshot Archived:

COPY PASTE FROM OLD WEBSITE

THE DIGITAL CURRENCY OF THE FUTURE FOR EVERY HUMAN

Electronic Dollar (or eDollar) is a private, secure, untraceable, decentralized digital currency. You are your bank, you control your funds, and nobody can trace your transfers unless you allow them to do so.

Features

Decentralized

eDollar is decentralized, trustless cryptocurrency. The whole system is operated by peer-to-peer network, Transactions are confirmed by distributed consensus, and then recorded on the blockchain immutably

Secure

Using the power of a distributed peer-to-peer consensus network, every transaction on the network is cryptographically secured. Wallet files are encrypted with a passphrase to ensure they are useless if stolen

Private

All transactions in eDollar are Ring Confidential Transactions (RingCT) with minimum ring size of 4. The amount of any transaction is always hidden to the public, and because blocks cannot be analyzed, without the keys no one can ever know where that money comes from

Untraceble

By taking advantage of ring signatures, a special property of a certain type of cryptography, Edollar is able to ensure that transactions are not only untraceable, but have an optional measure of ambiguity that ensures that transactions cannot easily be tied back to an individual user or computer.

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