Staking Without Locking Up Your Capital
Most people, who understand staking, picture this: you lock up your tokens, you earn rewards, and if you want to leave, you wait. It's treated as the price of participation.
Validators on the eCurrency network keep their capital fully liquid while still participating in consensus. They can move, spend, or transfer their ECR at any time, regardless of whether they're actively validating.
Why locking became standard
When Ethereum and similar networks designed their staking systems, they needed a way to make attacks expensive. If a validator misbehaves, double-signing blocks or trying to manipulate the chain, the protocol penalizes them by destroying part of their stake. This is called slashing.
For slashing to work as a deterrent, capital has to be locked up first. You can't threaten to confiscate something the validator can withdraw at any moment. The lockup and slashing mechanism are paired by design: one requires the other.
Withdrawal queues exist for a related reason. They prevent a rush of validators exiting at once and destabilising the network. Under high validator churn, that queue can stretch for days or weeks.
The cost of locking
These design decisions carry real costs. Locking capital means the funds are unavailable for any other use during the bonding period. For individual holders with smaller amounts, the opportunity cost is high enough that direct participation rarely makes economic sense.
The result is structural centralisation pressure. The economics push smaller holders toward delegation rather than direct participation. Validator sets gradually concentrate around the providers large enough to absorb capital immobilisation.
How eCurrency measures stake differently
eCurrency measures genuine economic commitment without requiring custody of funds. The answer is UTXO-native staking.
In eCurrency, stake weight is derived from the value and age of your UTXOs (unspent transaction outputs that represent your holdings). The longer you've held a set of ECR without moving it, the more weight it carries in consensus calculation. Older, larger holdings carry more influence, which reflects genuine economic commitment.
When a UTXO participates in block validation, its age resets. This is deliberate. It prevents any single participant from accumulating a permanent, compounding advantage by sitting still. Weight has to be actively maintained through participation.
There are no slashing penalties. Validators who hold ECR already want the network to function. Their interests are aligned with its health. The capital they retain is fully liquid, which is the point.

What this means for participation
Any ECR holder can run a validator node without giving up access to their funds. The hardware requirements are moderate, and the node software is Docker-deployable. Entry barriers are lower than chains that require enterprise-grade infrastructure.
Rewards come from the global RewardFund, accumulated from transaction fees and distributed at a fixed rate per validated block (RewardFund divided by 500). This smoothing mechanism produces steady returns rather than volatile ones driven by fee spikes or block selection luck.
Because there's no delegation requirement, the validator set can be broad. Participation isn't funnelled through a handful of large providers. It's open to anyone willing to run the software and hold ECR.
Why this matters for payment infrastructure
Payment infrastructure needs broad, stable validator participation from people who can operate without managing locked capital, withdrawal windows, and slashing risk. Keeping those constraints out of the protocol makes participation accessible to a wider range of people. That's where decentralisation actually comes from.
Read more about technology behind eCurrency here



