E Money Network vs Arbitrum Nova Scalability

Real-time TPS

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Max TPS (100 blocks)

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Max Theoretical TPS

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Transaction Volume

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Block Time

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Finality

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Type

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Launch Date

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

E Money Network vs Arbitrum Nova Decentralization New

Nakamoto Coefficient

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Miners

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Hashrate

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Consensus Mechanism

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Governance

Chainspect

E Money Network and Arbitrum Nova have no data

E
A

Other Comparisons

About Blockchains

About E Money Network

E Money Network stands as the pioneering public permissioned blockchain that integrates Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) processes on-chain. It offers a MiCA-compliant infrastructure with robust bank-grade security, catering to both individual and institutional users.

The network serves as a seamless bridge between Web2 and Web3, incorporating a Biometric Bridge, KYC compliance, Proof of Ownership, and Chain of Custody.

With a focus on Real World Assets (RWA), E Money network enables users to tokenise on-chain tangible assets effortlessly.

About Arbitrum Nova

Arbitrum Nova is a high-performance alternative to Arbitrum One's chain. While Arbitrum One implements the purely trustless Rollup protocol, Arbitrum Nova implements the mostly trustless AnyTrust protocol. The key difference between Rollup and AnyTrust is that the AnyTrust protocol introduces an additional trust assumption in the form of a Data Availability Committee (DAC). This committee (detailed below) is responsible for expediting the process of storing, batching, and posting child chain transaction data to Ethereum's parent chain. This lets you use Arbitrum in scenarios that demand performance and affordability, while Arbitrum One is optimal for scenarios that demand Ethereum's pure trustlessness.

Blockchains Socials

E Money Network Socials

Arbitrum Nova Socials