A common explanation for the Dash "instamine" (fastmine is a more appropriate term) was that since Litecoin had a fastmine, Dash's fastmine could be attributed to a bug from the Litecoin code.
This explanation, which is also featured in Dash's official summary here:https://dashpay.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/OC/pages/19759164/Dash+Instamine+Issue+Clarificationwill need to be changed. Through my research I have discovered that there was another culprit responsible for Dash's fastmine. That was never a common explanation (i only ever heard it mentioned by 1 person) , nor is it described like that in Dash official summary.
Let me quote Dash's official summary :
XCoin as it was called at the time was based off of the Litecoin code base, which unbeknownst to the developers contained restrictions on the frequency and extent of adjustments which
the network could apply to mining difficulty.
Because of these restrictions, and the popularity of mining the coin, the network produced a large number of blocks with the maximum allowable coins in each block.
This does not indicate a Litecoin fastmine to me, it just indicates the factors that played a role in Dash
unique fastmine instamine. As a reminder, Dash was first forked
from Litecoin codebase and later on forked from Bitcoin code base. Just because Dash was originally forked from Litecoin and had a fastmine instamine, does not mean Litecoin must have had a
fastmine instamine as well. I dont see anything that needs to be changed in the Dash official summary so far, unless you found something that completely invalidate above official quotation
(which would surprise me).
Also i dont like how some of your posts are formulated :
Dash founder Evan Duffield, while having a brilliant mind, was an impetuous sort in 2014, prone to rushing his code releases in his eagerness and rush to launch.
Can this position be disproven based on available facts?
It comes across as clickbait readbait and can possibly make google search results focus on the (misleading) title alone.
I can understand the drive to promote one's own documentary, but please be a little bit more carefull how you approach this promotion.