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Exchange
Exchange
  • Introducing: LX
  • Main Features
    • Social Features
  • Reliability
  • High Liquidity
  • High Performance
  • Simple Trading
  • Diversity
  • Interoperability/Bridge
  • User Support
  • Transparency
  • Security
  • The Problem
    • Negative Consequences of Centralization
  • The Solution
    • Security Solutions as a Decentralized Exchange
  • LX: A Decentralized Social Trading Platform
    • Lux Exchange DAO
  • Decentralized Application
  • User Experience
    • Easy to use
  • Accounts, Wallets, and Keys
  • Authentication
  • Features
    • Hardware Wallets
  • Portfolios
  • Social Trading
  • People Based Portfolios
  • Copy Swaps
  • Trading Charts
  • Indicator Alarm Manager
  • Smart Search
  • Watchlist
  • Community Support
    • Decentralized community service
  • Rewarded Content Production/Trading Bots
  • Token Curated Customer Service
  • LX Architecture
    • LX Architecture Comparison
  • eToro
  • EtherDelta
  • 0x Protocol
  • LX
  • Lux Protocol
    • Lux as a Distributed Autonomous Organization (DAO)
  • Governance
  • Lux Consensus
  • Terminology
  • Election Triggers
  • Attacks
    • Tragedy of Commons
  • Collusion
  • Censorship
  • ASIC Attacks
  • Long Range Attacks
  • Treasury and Bounty
    • Budgeting
  • Bounty
  • Lux Tokenomics
  • Decentralized Liquidity Pool (DLP)
  • Market Maker Fees
  • LX C++ Application Programming Interface (API)
  • Permission Mapping
  • Permission Evaluation Applied to Copy Trading
  • Parallel Permission Evaluation
  • LX Key Capabilities
  • Atomic Swaps
  • Facilitating Liquidity
  • Exchange Traded Funds
  • Crypto-asset Custody for Gateways
  • Cold Wallet
  • Smart coins
  • Crypto-asset Volatility
  • Gold as Collateral
  • Incentives
  • Interest Rate
  • Development Roadmap
  • LUX Constitution and Ricardian Contracts
  • Lux Protocol
  • DEX Core Platform
  • DApp UI/UX
  • Hardware Wallet Integration
  • Quality Assurance
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Permission Mapping

The Lux platform allows each account to define a mapping between an action or contract of any other account and their own named permission level. For example, an account holder could map the account holder's social media application to the account holder's ``friends'' permission group. With this mapping, any friend could post as the account holder on the account holder's social media. Even though they would post as the account holder, they would still use their own keys to sign the action. This means it is always possible to identify which friends used the account and in what way.

This same social feature of permission mapping can be used as the infrastructure for LX copy trades. People based portfolios through these preset permission levels linking multiple account wallets to create liquidity pools that can be managed from one or several private key signatures.

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Last updated 2 years ago

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