Having announcements in this Bitcointalk thread would be advantageous, reaching the public more readily than everyone needing to go to many different login-requiring Slack groups, if following many coins. A lot of us already have dozens of other logins or more.
But the developments sound interesting.
The reason behind creating Jupiter is simple
Using any other blockchain would not be economically feasible. One example of my encrypted syslog application would create 29 million messages daily. In NXT terms and todays prices, that would cost this particular business $1,238,300.00 per day to store messages
I wonder how that works.
It would be technically possible to have a decentralized, distributed database which didn't reproduce all of its data on every computer. For instance, if 10000 computers have a blockchain, it isn't really necessary to reproduce 100% of it on each and every computer, especially for some types of data for which malicious attempts to modify are less likely. A more moderate number of copies of each portion would suffice.
Maybe that is what Jelurida is doing. Or maybe it is doing something else, if there is something I am overlooking.
Transacting in any sort of bulk will cost businesses money. That is why I decided to make the transactions essentially free for customers. They are paying for software, engineering, and support from Sigwo Technologies.
It's not
where the data is stored, but that it is stored/transacted at all. It is the cost of the 'transaction' or the save, not the replication. You can stop the transaction from some nodes by blacklisting them. Essentially, you can have Company A messages decentrally stored on all nodes except Company B nodes, which are blacklisted. This is a quick theoretical and not fully engineered for production.