AIA Chain: POS, AI, and Financial Payments
  • Summary
  • Introduction
  • Why Decentralization Matters
  • Introduction to AIA Chain
  • Why the World Needs AIA Chain
  • Key Features
  • How AIA Chain Works
    • Elements of AIA Chain
    • AIA Chain Token
    • Other Digital Assets
    • AIA Chain Platform
    • AIA Chain Development Suite
  • AIA Chain Performance
  • Consensus Mechanism
    • APoS
    • AISN
  • Economics
    • Token Supply and Issuance Strategy
    • AIA Token Issuance Mechanism and Strategy
      • Initial Token Issuance (ICO) and Other Issuance Methods:
      • Block Rewards:
      • Lock-Up and Unlocking Strategy:
  • Market Cap and Fully Diluted Valuation (FDV)
    • Market Cap
    • Circulation Rate
    • Growth Potential Analysis
  • General Token Issuance Principles
  • Supply and Inflation
  • AIA Chain Economic Design Principles
  • AIA Chain Economic Model Overview
    • Economic Stakeholders
    • Validator Rewards
    • Operational Requirements
    • Contract Rewards
  • Economic Model Overview
    • Blockchain Overview
    • AIA’s Value Mission - Simplifying Success
      • AI Integration
    • AIA Consensus Mechanism - Genesis Coin Minting Rights
    • Token Allocation for Computing Power
      • Token Holding Power
    • Promotion Power
    • AISN Promotional Computing Power Algorithm Demonstration
    • AISN Mechanism Destruction
    • AIA Ecosystem Development
  • Cross-Chain
  • Meta-Transactions
  • AIA Chain Roadmap
  • AIA Chain Support Program
    • Operational Support
      • Seed Investment
      • Mentorship
      • Extensive Network
  • Relevant Support Program Tracks
  • Advantages of AIA in Financial Payments
  • Summary
    • Maintaining Oversight
    • Technical Governance
    • Future of AIA Chain
    • Participate in AIA Chain's Test Environment
    • Connect with Us on Social Media
  • Disclaimer
    • Notice
    • AIA Chain Token Disclaimer
      • Information Provision Purpose
    • AIA Chain Company and Platform Trademarks
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  1. AIA Chain Economic Model Overview

Contract Rewards

A portion of the fees generated by specific transactions is allocated to contracts running during those transactions. These "random rewards" can be distributed according to rules specified in the contracts, such as being allocated to accounts controlled by contract developers, investors, DAOs, etc. The percentage of fees allocated to these rewards is set as a system-level parameter, initially at 30%. Developers can always charge additional fees outside this mechanism by requesting extra funds for contract calls. This creates a business model for developers: charging for their applications. The system-level minimum fee prevents "bottom-feeding competition," which could drive fees to zero or be paid by other developers. This effectively incentivizes developers to build applications and core network contracts since they will receive compensation proportional to the usage of these contracts.

Token holders can choose not to participate in staking, for instance, because they are merely temporary holders, providing liquidity to the transaction market, or they prefer not to participate. Non-participating token holders do not gain additional benefits from the network’s operations, although their tokens still have utility in driving data storage and application usage on the network.

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Last updated 8 months ago