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Solana (blockchain platform)

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Solana
Denominations
CodeSOL
Development
Original author(s)Anatoly Yakovenko, Raj Gokal
White paperSolana: A new architecture for a high performance blockchain
Code repositoryhttps://github.com/solana-labs/solana
Development statusActive
Developer(s)Solana Labs & Solana Foundation
LicenseApache 2.0[1]
Ledger
Block explorerhttps://explorer.solana.com/
Website
Websitesolana.com

Solana is a publicblockchain platform that uses aproof-of-stake consensus mechanism and providessmart contract functionality. The platform's native cryptocurrency is SOL. Solana was founded in 2018 byToly Yakovenko and Raj Gokal, and the network was launched in March 2020 by their San Francisco-based company, Solana Labs.

Designed to support decentralized applications and high-throughput transactions, Solana gained traction as a competitor toEthereum, particularly during the rise ofnon-fungible tokens (NFTs) in 2021. The platform's architecture aims to provide faster transaction speeds and lower costs than other major blockchains. However, the high volume of transactions has also contributed to several notable network outages that have impacted its stability and reliability.

The history of Solana has been marked by rapid growth and volatility. After a successful funding round in June 2021, the price of SOL grew by nearly 12,000% that year, reaching a market capitalization of over $70 billion. The platform has since faced challenges, including a major wallet hack in August 2022, a price collapse following the bankruptcy ofFTX, and legal scrutiny from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which in 2023 alleged that SOL qualifies as an unregistered security. Nevertheless, in January 2025 United States President Donald Trump'smemecoin,$TRUMP, began using the Solana blockchain causing a brief surge to near all-time highs.

Characteristics

According to the company'swhite paper, Solana runs on aproof of stake model.[2]The New York Times andFinancial Times described the coin as an alternative toEthereum.[3][4]

History

Solana was first opened to the public in March 2020,[2] with its first block being created on 16 March 2020.[5] The Solana blockchain was designed to support smart contracts anddecentralized apps in particular.[2][6] Large numbers of simultaneous transactions have contributed to several outages of the Solana blockchain.[6]

In June 2021, Solana Labs sold $314 million worth of its native cryptocurrency, SOL, to a group of funds led byAndreessen Horowitz andPolychain Capital.[7]

The market capitalization of the Solana blockchain surpassed $63 billion in September 2021,[8] and reached $74 billion in early November 2021, having risen by nearly 12,000% that year to a price of $259.96.[2] The blockchain's popularity at this time was due in part to interest inNFTs.[6]

On 1 July 2022, aclass action lawsuit was filed against Solana Labs. The lawsuit accused Solana of selling unregisteredsecurities tokens in the form of Solana from 24 March 2020, onward and that Solana deliberately misled investors concerning the total circulating supply of SOL tokens. According to the lawsuit,Toly Yakovenko, the founder of Solana Labs, lent a market maker more than 11.3 million tokens in April 2020 and failed to disclose this information to the public. The lawsuit claimed that Solana stated it would reduce the supply by this amount, but it only burned 3.3 million tokens.[9]

On 3 August 2022, 9,231 Solana wallets were hacked[10] and four Solana wallet addresses stole approximately $8 million from victims.[11] The Solana Foundation said that the hack was caused by digital wallet software from Slope Finance.[11]

In November 2022, the price of SOL token dropped by 40 percent in one day following thebankruptcy of FTX, due to sell off fromAlameda Research. SOL tokens were Alameda's second-largest holding at the time[12][13] and FTX held $982 million in SOL tokens.[14] By the end of 2022, Solana had lost more than $50 billion in market capitalization since the beginning of the year.[6]

From the start of 2023 until 15 March, coinciding with a rise in the cryptocurrency market, Solana's market capitalization had more than doubled to around $7 billion.[15]

In June 2023, theSEC suedCoinbase, alleging that Solana and twelve other currencies offered by the platform failed theHowey Test and qualified as securities. The suit accused Coinbase of illegally evadingrequirements for disclosure by offering these tokens. The SEC had previously issued aWells notice to Coinbase in March.[16][17] Solana Foundation has denied that the token is a security.[18] The price of SOL token dropped nearly 30% after this announcement from the SEC, This caused some exchanges to liquidate their holdings, includingRobinhood which delisted SOL and other tokens named by the SEC.[19][20]

In November 2024, Robinhood Crypto relisted SOL for U.S. customers, alongside several other cryptocurrencies.[21][non-primary source needed]

In January 2025, the SOL token reached a new all-time high of $294, following the launch of US President Donald Trump's memecoin.[22]

Outages

The Solana blockchain had experienced several notable outages in service.

On 14 September 2021, the Solana blockchain went offline after a surge of transactions caused the network tofork, and differentvalidators had different views of the state of the network. The network was brought back online the next day on 15 September 2021.[23] The outage lasted a total of about 17 hours.[8]

The Solana blockchain again went offline on 1 May, with the outage lasting roughly seven hours due to it being taken offline by bots.[24] The blockchain went offline again on 31 May 2022, due to a bug in how the blockchain processes offline transactions. This outage lasted about four and a half hours.[25][26][27]

On 1 October 2022, the Solana network went down for 6 hours due to a consensus bug in the validator client allowing a misconfigured node to publish multiple valid but different blocks.[28]

Solana's outages have frequently resulted in the value of the network's native SOL token falling.[6][29]

Trump cryptocurrency report

Main article:Cryptocurrency in the second Trump presidency

On November 25, 2025, U.S RepresentativeJamie Raskin released a report finding that following an investigation by Democrats on the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, it was determined that the cryptocurrency policies of Trump were in fact used to benefit Trump and his family, with Trump in fact adding billions of dollars to his net worth through cryptocurrency schemes which were entangled with foreign governments, corporate allies, and criminal actors, with Solana hosting much of Trump's cryptocurrency transactions. The report, titleTrump, Crypto, and a New Age of Corruption, also found that Trump dismantled anti-corruption and safeguards and pardoned people who were regarded as "corporate croonies" in order build his cryptocurrency empire.[30][31][32]

Application

In April 2023, Solana Mobile, a subsidiary of Solana Labs,[33] began selling the Solana Saga, anAndroid smartphone with several Solana-based decentralized apps preinstalled.[34]

In September 2023,Visa announced that along with payment processorsWorldpay, Inc. andNuvei, it had added support for the Solana blockchain to send payments to merchants using the stablecoinUSD Coin (USDC), rather than fiat currency via bank wire.[35]

In January 2025, Donald Trump launched his memecoin,$TRUMP, using the Solana blockchain, causing a surge of usage of Solana.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^"solana/LICENSE". Solana Labs. 17 March 2023.Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved18 March 2023.
  2. ^abcdLocke, Taylor (5 November 2021)."Solana is up 12,000% this year—what to know before buying the Ethereum competitor".CNBC. Retrieved29 March 2023.
  3. ^Yaffe-Bellany, David (2022-02-07)."They Made Millions on Luna, Solana and Polygon: Crypto's Boom Beyond Bitcoin".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2023-04-07.
  4. ^"Ethereum co-founder hits out at economics of fast-growing Solana blockchain".Financial Times. 2022-03-15. Retrieved2023-04-07.
  5. ^Overdahl, James; Lewis, Craig M. (2025)."Solana and the SOL Market".SSRN Electronic Journal.doi:10.2139/ssrn.5117683.ISSN 1556-5068.SSRN 5117683.
  6. ^abcdeGoswami, Rohan (30 December 2022)."Solana's slide accelerates — $50 billion in value wiped from the cryptocurrency in 2022".CNBC.Archived from the original on 2022-12-30. Retrieved30 March 2023.
  7. ^Osipovich, Alexander (9 June 2021)."Crypto Startup Solana Raises $314 Million to Develop Faster Blockchain".Wall Street Journal.Archived from the original on 2022-11-21. Retrieved2022-11-21.
  8. ^abWells, Charlie; Kharif, Olga (18 September 2021)."What the Solana Blackout Reveals About the Fragility of Crypto".Bloomberg. Retrieved29 March 2023.
  9. ^Miller, Rosemarie."New Lawsuit Alleging That Solana Is A Security Could Have Big Implications For The Crypto Investment Landscape".Forbes.Archived from the original on 2022-07-07. Retrieved2022-07-08.
  10. ^"Hacking attack drains £5m from 8,000 wallets linked to Solana crypto network".the Guardian. 2022-08-03.Archived from the original on 2022-09-28. Retrieved2022-09-28.
  11. ^ab"Crypto Takes a Fresh Hit as Thousands of Solana Wallets Hacked".Bloomberg.com. 3 August 2022.Archived from the original on 26 August 2022. Retrieved19 March 2023.
  12. ^Locke, Taylor (9 November 2022)."How will the Binance-FTX drama affect Solana? Here's what we know so far".Fortune.Archived from the original on 2022-11-10. Retrieved2022-11-10.
  13. ^Shen, Muyao; Shukla, Sidhartha (9 November 2022)."'Ethereum Killer' Solana Falls Prey to Binance-FTX Deal Turmoil".Bloomberg.com.Archived from the original on 10 November 2022. Retrieved24 February 2023.
  14. ^Yang, Yueqi (13 November 2022)."FTX's Balance Sheet, Hack Paint Dim Picture for User Recovery".Bloomberg.Archived from the original on 24 March 2023. Retrieved6 December 2022.
  15. ^Kharpal, Arjun (15 March 2023)."Bitcoin is already up 50% this year — beating stocks and gold".CNBC. Retrieved28 March 2023.
  16. ^Godoy, Jody (7 June 2023)."What makes a crypto asset a security in the U.S.?".Reuters. Retrieved12 June 2023.
  17. ^Lawler, Richard (6 June 2023)."Coinbase is being sued by the SEC".The Verge. Retrieved12 June 2023.
  18. ^"Solana Foundation finally addresses 'the elephant in the room' and denies Solana's native token is a security".Fortune Crypto.
  19. ^Roberts, Jeff John (11 June 2023)."Solano, Cardano, and Polygon plunge nearly 30% as big firms dump holdings after SEC allegations".Fortune. Retrieved17 June 2023 – viaYahoo! News.
  20. ^Weiss, Ben (9 June 2023)."Robinhood to delist tokens for Solana, Cardano, and Polygon after SEC suits name them as securities".Fortune. Retrieved18 June 2023 – via Yahoo! News.
  21. ^"Robinhood Crypto Expands Offering With Solana (SOL), Pepe (PEPE), Cardano (ADA), & XRP (XRP) for U.S. Customers".Robinhood Newsroom. November 30, 2024. RetrievedApril 27, 2025.
  22. ^abWeiss, Ben (January 22, 2025)."Solana battles Coinbase outages as SOL hits new high".Fortune. RetrievedApril 27, 2025.
  23. ^Shumba, Camomile (15 September 2021)."Solana says it is back up and running after a surge in transactions caused the network to crash the day before".Business Insider.Archived from the original on 13 November 2021. Retrieved2 December 2021 – via Yahoo News.
  24. ^Manjoo, Farhad (2022-05-05)."Opinion | What Is Happening to the People Falling for Crypto and NFTs".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331.Archived from the original on 2022-10-05. Retrieved2022-10-05.
  25. ^Sigalos, MacKenzie (1 June 2022)."Solana suffered its second outage in a month, sending price plunging".CNBC.com.Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved2 June 2022.
  26. ^Evans, Brian (1 June 2022)."Solana tumbles as its blockchain network suffers 2nd outage in a month".Business Insider.Archived from the original on 6 June 2022. Retrieved2 June 2022 – via finance.yahoo.com.
  27. ^"Solana suffered a four-hour blackout due to a bug in how the blockchain processes offline transactions".Fortune.Archived from the original on 2022-10-05. Retrieved2022-10-05.
  28. ^Locke, Taylor (1 October 2022)."Solana back online after another outage. Here's what happened".Fortune.Archived from the original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved2 October 2022.
  29. ^Chipolina, Scott (2022-10-07)."FT Cryptofinance: Solana loses its lustre".Financial Times. Retrieved2023-04-07.
  30. ^"Trump, Crypto and a New Age of Corruption"(PDF). House Judiciary Democrats. November 24, 2025. RetrievedNovember 26, 2025.
  31. ^"New Report Exposes the Trump Family's Multi-Billion-Dollar Crypto Empire, Fueled by Self-Dealing and Corrupt Foreign Interests". U.S. House Judiciary Committee. November 25, 2025. RetrievedNovember 25, 2025.
  32. ^MS Now (November 26, 2025)."Raskin on Trump family's crypto earnings: 'We're talking billions of dollars'". YouTube. RetrievedNovember 26, 2025.
  33. ^Weiss, Ben; Quiroz-Gutierrez, Marco (8 May 2023)."The Solana Saga is here. Should you spend $1,000 on the newest crypto smartphone?".Fortune Crypto. Fortune.
  34. ^Melinek, Jacquelyn (13 April 2023)."Ring ring, Solana's web3-focused Saga phone is calling".TechCrunch. Retrieved3 May 2023.
  35. ^Weiss, Ben (5 September 2023)."Visa to send stablecoin USDC over Solana to help pay merchants in crypto".Fortune Crypto. Fortune.
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