
Litecoin (LTC)
Litecoin (LTC) is an alternative cryptocurrency created in October 2011 by Charles "Charlie" Lee. The broader differences between the two cryptocurrencies are listed in the table below. **Bitcoin** **Litecoin** Satoshi Nakamoto Charlie Lee Block Generation Time 2.5 Minutes Initial Reward Current Block Reward Halved every 210,000 blocks Halved every 840,000 blocks Litecoin is designed to produce four times as many blocks as Bitcoin (1 new block every 2.5 minutes to Bitcoin's 10), and it also allows for 4x the coin limit, making its main appeal over Bitcoin to do with speed and ease of acquisition. In 2017, Litecoin adopted SegWit, and because of Litecoin's similarity to Bitcoin, it worked as a testing ground or testnet for SegWit's viability on the larger Bitcoin network. Some opponents of the SegWit adoption who advocated for larger Bitcoin block sizes created a Bitcoin hard fork that resulted in Bitcoin Cash. Charlie Lee has also argued that when “the Bitcoin blockchain is congested and the fees are high, it’s easy to use Litecoin to onboard onto the Lightning Network.” MimbleWimble is a privacy protocol that builds on confidential transactions that encrypt or obscure information like transaction amounts.

What Is Litecoin (LTC)?
Litecoin (LTC) is an alternative cryptocurrency created in October 2011 by Charles "Charlie" Lee. Litecoin is a fork of Bitcoin (BTC). Like Bitcoin, Litecoin is based on an open-source global payment network that is not controlled by any central authority. Litecoin differs from Bitcoin in aspects like faster block generation rate and use of Scrypt as a proof of work scheme.



Understanding Litecoin (LTC)
Charlie Lee is a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a former Google engineer who became interested in Bitcoin in 2011. According to Lee, "In October of 2011, I was playing around with the Bitcoin codebase, and I guess the short of it was that I was just trying to create ... a fork of Bitcoin. It was mainly a fun side project."
Scrypt Proof-of-Work Algorithm
Scrypt is a password-based key derivation function. According to Tarsnip, "the scrypt key derivation function was originally developed for use in the Tarsnap online backup system and is designed to be far more secure against hardware brute-force attacks than alternative functions such as PBKDF2 or bcrypt."
Scrypt was developed by Lee specifically to make large-scale, custom-built hardware attacks on the currency more difficult. Bitcoin's SHA-256 algorithm does not require a lot of random access memory (RAM) as an impediment to parallel processing, whereas Scrypt does.
At the beginning of the 2010s, as mining operations developed specialized hardware, like the application-specific circuit (ASIC) to solve SHA-256 hashing, it appeared that Bitcoin was vulnerable to such an attack. By making Litecoin's consensus algorithm memory intensive, Lee sought to thwart the hardware arms race, though in practice that didn't happen as the rise of GPUs answered the need for greater RAM.
How Is Bitcoin (BTC) Different From Litecoin (LTC)?
Litecoin was launched with the aim of being the "silver" to Bitcoin's "gold." Like Bitcoin, Litecoin is a peer-to-peer internet currency. It is a fully decentralized, open-source, global payment network. Lee developed Litecoin with the aim to improve on Bitcoin's shortcomings. The broader differences between the two cryptocurrencies are listed in the table below.
Bitcoin
Litecoin
Satoshi Nakamoto
Charlie Lee
Coin Limit
21 Million
84 Million
Block Generation Time
10 Minutes
2.5 Minutes
Algorithm
Initial Reward
Current Block Reward
Halved every 210,000 blocks
Halved every 840,000 blocks
Litecoin is designed to produce four times as many blocks as Bitcoin (1 new block every 2.5 minutes to Bitcoin's 10), and it also allows for 4x the coin limit, making its main appeal over Bitcoin to do with speed and ease of acquisition. However, because Litecoin uses Scrypt (as opposed to Bitcoin's SHA-256) as a proof-of-work algorithm, the use of mining hardware such as ASIC miners or a GPU mining rig requires significantly more processing power.
Litecoin ranks in the Top 20 largest cryptocurrencies in terms of market capitalization (though still remaining far below that of Bitcoin), and as of September 2021, it had more than 66 million coins in circulation.
$14.54 B
Litecoin's market value as of September 4, 2021, per CoinMarketCap.
Plans for Litecoin (LTC)
Litecoin has implemented several features since its launch intended to improve its transaction speed without compromising the security and integrity of the network.
SegWit or Segregated Witness was first proposed for Bitcoin in 2015. It works by "segregating" the digital signal data (the "witness") outside the base block in the blockchain. SegWit was developed to address Bitcoin's scalability issue, but the proposal created deep controversy within the Bitcoin community.
In 2017, Litecoin adopted SegWit, and because of Litecoin's similarity to Bitcoin, it worked as a testing ground or testnet for SegWit's viability on the larger Bitcoin network. The test was a success, and Bitcoin adopted SegWit thereafter. Some opponents of the SegWit adoption who advocated for larger Bitcoin block sizes created a Bitcoin hard fork that resulted in Bitcoin Cash.
Lightning Network
The Lightning Network is a second-layer technology for bitcoin that uses micropayment channels to scale its blockchain’s capability to conduct transactions.
Similar to the SegWit example, the implementation of the Lightning Network on Litecoin has been a testnet to prove innovations are possible on Bitcoin. Charlie Lee has also argued that when “the Bitcoin blockchain is congested and the fees are high, it’s easy to use Litecoin to onboard onto the Lightning Network.”
MimbleWimble
MimbleWimble is a privacy protocol that builds on confidential transactions that encrypt or obscure information like transaction amounts. It is argued that MimbleWimble can decrease blocksize and increase scalability. Charlie Lee announced in early 2019 that Litecoin would pursue MimbleWimble development, and as of 2021, development is underway.
Related terms:
Altcoin Investing: What Investors Need to Know
An Altcoin is an alternate cryptocurrency other than Bitcoin. Learn about Altcoins, how they work, and which are the most popular. read more
Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) Miner
An application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) miner is a computerized device that was designed for the sole purpose of mining bitcoins. read more
Bitcoin Cash
Bitcoin cash is a cryptocurrency created in August 2017, arising from a fork of Bitcoin. read more
Cryptocurrency : What Is Cryptocurrency?
A cryptocurrency is a digital or virtual currency that uses cryptography and is difficult to counterfeit because of this security feature. read more
Hard Fork (Blockchain)
A hard fork is a radical change to the protocol of a blockchain network that makes previously invalid blocks/transactions valid—or vice-versa. read more
Lightning Network
Lightning Network is a second layer to bitcoin's blockchain that proposes to decongest its network by creating micropayment channels between two parties. read more
Proof of Burn (Cryptocurrency)
The proof of burn (POB) consensus algorithm combines the proof of work (POW) and proof of stake (POS) and partially overcomes their shortcomings. read more
Proof of Work (PoW)
Proof of work describes the process that allows the bitcoin network to remain robust by making the process of mining, or recording transactions, difficult. read more
Peer-to-Peer (Virtual Currency)
Peer-to-peer virtual currency refers to the exchange or sharing of information, data, or assets between parties without the involvement of a central authority. read more
SegWit (Segregated Witness)
SegWit is the process by which blocks on a blockchain are made smaller by removing signature data from Bitcoin transactions. read more