The figures on this page are compiled from data files generated by the Bisq software. You can verify everything yourself by running these scripts on GitHub.
Cycle Started22 Feb 2020 / Block 618547
Cycle Ended27 Mar 2020 / Block 623226
Supply Change+ 35,452
Governance34 of 35 proposals accepted
BSQ Amount | # of transactions | |
---|---|---|
Burn | ||
Proof-of-burn¹ | 82,700 | 5 |
Trading fees² | 8,791 | 3,372 |
Compensation request fees | 38 | 19 |
Blind vote fees | 34 | 17 |
Proposal fees | 32 | 16 |
Irregular | 2 | 1 |
Total Burn | 91,597 | 3,686 |
Issuance | ||
Compensation³ | 127,050 | |
Reimbursements⁴ | 0 | |
Total Issuance | 127,050 | |
Net BSQ Supply Change⁵ | +35,452 |
¹ Proof-of-burn includes trading fees paid in BTC and disputed BTC deposits for trades that went to arbitration (see docs for more details). Funds may be accrued and burned in different cycles, so proof-of-burn figures do not map directly to activity in their cycles.
² BSQ trading fees only. BTC trading fees are included in proof-of-burn.
³ See more details on GitHub.
⁴ Over time, the net impact of reimbursement issuances on BSQ supply is close to zero, as corresponding amounts of BTC are burned through proof-of-burn (see docs for more details).
⁵ Decreases in BSQ supply are good.
Made by user huey735 with this issue.
Accepted
For promotion to L1 support agent following a successful internship in Cycle 11.
DATA_RELAY_NODE_OPERATOR
Made by user devinbileck with this issue.
Accepted
Cycle 11 was the first full DAO cycle under the reorganization detailed earlier this year.
Notably, this cycle set a new all-time record for trade fee payments using BSQ—not a bad outcome for the last DAO cycle before the DAO’s 1-year anniversary. There were 3,372 BSQ fee payments in this cycle, compared to 2,804 in Cycle 10, and 2,805 in Cycle 3 (which was the last high).
For promotion to L1 support agent following a successful internship in Cycle 11.