ERC-20: The Token Standard That Changed Everything

In November 2015, an Ethereum developer named Fabian Vogelsteller published a proposal called EIP-20. It described a simple standard for creating tokens on the Ethereum blockchain. Any developer could follow this standard to create a token that would be compatible with wallets, exchanges, and other infrastructure. The proposal was accepted and renamed ERC-20 (“Ethereum Request for Comment 20”). It would become the most important technical standard in crypto history.

Before ERC-20, creating a cryptocurrency required building an entirely new blockchain. You needed miners, nodes, wallets, and exchanges to support your coin. The barrier to entry was high, which is why there were only a few hundred cryptocurrencies in 2015. After ERC-20, creating a token became trivial. A developer could write a few dozen lines of Solidity code, deploy it to Ethereum, and they had a fully functional token. No blockchain needed. No miners needed. No infrastructure needed.

This simplicity unleashed a tsunami of tokens. In 2016, a few dozen ERC-20 tokens existed. By 2017, there were thousands. By 2018, tens of thousands. Every ICO in the 2017 bubble used ERC-20. Every DeFi protocol used ERC-20 for its governance token. Every meme coin, every celebrity endorsement, every marketing gimmick could be turned into an ERC-20 token. The standard had democratized token creation — for better and for worse.

ERC-20’s simplicity was its genius. The standard defined just a few functions: transfer, balanceOf, totalSupply, approve, allowance. That was enough to make tokens interoperable. An ERC-20 token from one project could be traded on a decentralized exchange, stored in a wallet, lent on a lending platform, and used in a game — all using the same interface. The standard created a universal language for tokens on Ethereum.

The impact of ERC-20 extended far beyond Ethereum. Other blockchains copied the pattern. BEP-20 on Binance Smart Chain. TRC-20 on Tron. SPL on Solana. The idea that tokens should be interoperable standards, not custom implementations, became a core principle of the entire crypto industry. ERC-20 is sometimes criticized today for being too simple — it doesn’t handle edge cases well, and better standards like ERC-777 and ERC-1155 have been proposed. But its simplicity was exactly what made it successful. Sometimes, the most impactful innovations are the ones that make hard things easy.

Related Articles


Mal.io

Mal.io

منصة مال بوابتك المالية في العملات المشفره و الويب ٣

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *