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St-Georges Eco-Mining $SX.ca $SXOOF Signs Agreement to Spin-Out Subsidiary #ZeU $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:50 AM on Thursday, May 31st, 2018

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  • Announced the signing of an arrangement agreement providing for the spin-out of its subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc
  • Intend to list ZeU on the Canadian Securities Exchange
  • Shareholders will receive 11,249,825 shares of Zeu,
    • representing one share of ZeU for every eight common shares of St-Georges held

Montreal, QC / May 31, 2018 – St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE: SX) (OTC: SXOOF) (FSE: 85G1) is pleased to announce the signing of an arrangement agreement providing for the spin-out of its subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc. with the intent of listing ZeU on the Canadian Securities Exchange.

Under the terms of the Arrangement Agreement, shareholders of St-Georges at the time of the completion of the Spin-Out, anticipated to be the latter part of July, will receive 11,249,825 shares of Zeu, representing one (1) share of ZeU for every eight (8) common shares of St-Georges held based on the current issued and outstanding share capital. A St-Georges Shareholders’ meeting to approve the Arrangement Agreement is set for July 5, 2018 and proxy materials related to the meeting will be delivered to shareholders and made available on SEDAR in June 2018. A copy of the Arrangement Agreement will also be filed on SEDAR. The Arrangement Agreement is subject to the acceptance of the CSE.

ZeU holds an exclusive license to use Qingdao Tiande Technologies Limited and Beijing Tiande Technologies Limited’s (collectively “Tiande”) proprietary technologies, patents and know-how to develop and commercialize novel mineral commodity production chain control, tracking and trading exchanges, and has entered into a binding asset purchase agreement with Tiande, and the intervention Guiyang Tiande Technologies Limited, to acquire substantially all the intellectual property of Tiande, as more particularly described in St-Georges February 26 and May 22, 2018 press releases.

ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

“Frank Dumas”

FRANK DUMAS, PRESIDENT & CEO

About St-Georges

St-Georges is developing new technologies to solve the some of the most common environmental problems in the mining industry.

The Company controls directly or indirectly, through rights of first refusal, all of the active mineral tenures in Iceland. It also explores for nickel on the Julie Nickel Project & for industrial minerals on Quebec’s North Shore and for lithium and rare metals in Northern Quebec and in the Abitibi region. Headquartered in Montreal, St-Georges’ stock is listed on the CSE under the symbol SX, on the US OTC under the Symbol SXOOF and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol 85G1.

The Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or the accuracy of the contents of this release.

The release contains forwarding looking information and statements as defined by law including, without limitation, Canadian securities laws and the “safe harbor” provisions of the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“forward-looking statements”), respecting St-Georges’ plans to spin-out its subsidiary ZeU. which is intended to be listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange. Forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to materially differ from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements including that the spin-out may not be completed as planned or at all due to failure to obtain shareholder or regulatory approval ,the inability to complete the Acquisition, raise sufficient capital to adequately fund ZeU or a decision of the board of St-Georges not to proceed, which decision can be made at any time prior to closing. Forward-looking statements are based on the opinions and estimates of management at the date the statements are made and a number of assumptions that may prove to be incorrect, including, without limitation, assumptions about general business and economic conditions, the timing and receipt of required approval and continued availability of capital and financing. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements contained herein. The foregoing list is not exhaustive and St-Georges undertakes no obligation to update any of the foregoing except as required by law.

Forget #Bitcoin: #Blockchain is the Future $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca $AAO.ca $HPQ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:52 AM on Tuesday, May 29th, 2018
By Nathan Reiff | May 27, 2018 — 5:55 AM EDT

Cryptocurrencies of all types make use of distributed ledger technology known as blockchain. Blockchains act as decentralized systems for recording and documenting transactions that take place involving a particular digital currency. Put simply, blockchain is a transaction ledger that maintains identical copies across each member computer within a network.

Any party is able to both review previous entries and record new ones, although most blockchain networks have complex rules for the addition of new groups of records, “blocks,” to the chain of previous records. The blocks and the contents within them are protected by powerful cryptography, which insures that previous transactions within the network cannot be either forged or destroyed. In this way, blockchain technology allows a digital currency to maintain a trusted transaction network without relying on a central authority. It is for this reason that digital currencies are thought of as “decentralized.” (See also: How Does Blockchain Work?)

While blockchain is most famous for its role in facilitating the rise of digital currencies over the past several years, there are also many other non-cryptocurrency uses for this technology. Indeed, some blockchain proponents believe that the technology could far outpace cryptocurrencies themselves in terms of its overall impact, and that the real potential of blockchain is only just now being discovered. As such, it’s likely that financial advisors and many others in the investing world will encounter blockchain technology much more in the years to come, whether it is linked with a specific cryptocurrency or if it’s being utilized in any number of other applications. Below, we’ll explore some of the most exciting and popular use cases likely to bring blockchain further into the world of mainstream business and finance.

Cross-Border Payments

Traditionally, the transfer of value has been both expensive and slow, according to a report by Deloitte, and especially for payments taking place across international borders. One reason for this is that, when multiple currencies are involved, the transfer process typically requires multiple banks in multiple locations before the intended recipient can actually collect his or her money. There are existing services to help facilitate this process in a faster way, but these tend to by quite expensive.

Blockchain technology has the potential to provide a much faster and cheaper alternative to traditional cross-border payments methods. Indeed, while typical money remittance costs might be as high as 20% of the transfer amount, blockchain may allow for costs as low as 2%, as well as guaranteed and real-time transaction processing speeds. There are hurdles to be passed, including regulation of cryptocurrencies in different parts of the world and security concerns. Nonetheless, this is one of the most promising and talked about areas of blockchain technology application. (For more, see: Bitcoin’s Most Profitable Use: the $600 Billion Overseas Remittance Business?)

Smart Contracts

Smart contracts are often seen as a highly powerful application of blockchain technology. These contracts are actually computer programs that can oversee all aspects of an agreement, from facilitation to execution. When conditions are met, smart contracts can be entirely self-executing and self-enforcing. For proponents of smart contracts, these tools provide a more secure, more automated alternative to traditional contract law, as well as an application that is faster and cheaper than traditional methods.

The potential applications of smart contract technology are essentially limitless and could extend to almost any field of business in which contract law would normally apply. Of course, while highly touted, smart contracts are not a magical substitute for old-fashioned diligence. In fact, the case of the Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO) is a cautionary tale and a warning to investors to not assume that smart contracts are any better than the information and organization that a user puts into them. Nonetheless, smart contracts remain one of the most exciting ways that blockchain technology has already extended beyond the cryptocurrency space and into the broader business world. (See also: Understanding Smart Contracts.)

Identity Management

One of the most problematic results of the internet age has been identity security. As diligent as many individuals and organizations are in maintaining their online identities and securing private information, there are always nefarious actors looking to steal and profit off of these digital items. Blockchain technology has already demonstrated the potential for transforming the way that online identity management takes place.

Blockchain offers a tremendous level of security, thanks to independent verification processes that take place throughout member computers on a blockchain network. In digital currency cases, this verification is used to approve transactions before they are added to the chain. This mechanism could just as easily be applied to other types of verification procedures, including identity verification and many other applications as well.

At this point, blockchain is a technology with an exceptionally broad set of potential uses. Although blockchain is most famous for its connections to the blossoming cryptocurrency world, several other applications have already been explored. Perhaps even more exciting, though, is that new ways of utilizing blockchain emerge every day. As such, whether you are directly involved in the digital currency space or not, it’s essential to develop an understanding of blockchain and how it may be used to transform the business and investment worlds. (For additional reading, check out: All About Amazon’s New Blockchain Service.)

Read more: Forget Bitcoin: Blockchain is the Future | Investopedia https://www.investopedia.com/tech/forget-bitcoin-blockchain-future/#ixzz5GtuZEx4l

St-Georges’ $SX.ca $SXOOF subsidiary, #ZeU Crypto Networks, Appoints Chief Architect $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:24 PM on Thursday, May 24th, 2018

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  • Subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc. has appointed Oliver Qian as Chief Architect
  • While serving as Chief Architect at ZTE Corporation since 2011, Mr. Qian led the 3,000-person CTO development department that was responsible for Cloud Computing, Data Platform and Mobile Internet platform projects
  • Blockchain is now in use in ZTE’s supply chain financial services, as well as, Nanjing City for government certificate verification and exchange

Montreal, Quebec / May 24, 2018 – St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE: SX) (OTC: SXOOF) (FSE: 85G1) is pleased to announce that its subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc. has appointed Oliver Qian as Chief Architect. While serving as Chief Architect at ZTE Corporation since 2011, Mr. Qian led the 3,000-person CTO development department that was responsible for Cloud Computing, Data Platform and Mobile Internet platform projects. During his tenure at ZTE he led the blockchain development team that implemented multi-chain smart contracts enabling two end users to use each other’s data without acquiring the data. The blockchain is now in use in ZTE’s supply chain financial services, as well as, Nanjing City for government certificate verification and exchange.

Prior to his tenure at ZTE, Mr. Qian served as a Director of Alibaba.com where he led a 200-person development team that was responsible for Alibaba’s technology platform. His key developments include the first generation of Alibaba’s distributed database middleware and a distributed micro service framework called Dubbo that was one of the most successful open source micro service frameworks in China.

Frank Dumas, President & Interim CEO of ZeU Crypto Networks stated “The appointment of Mr. Qian is a major first milestone for ZeU and serves as high level validation of both the quality of our blockchain technology and its capabilities. We look forward to watching him lead our current team of great developers towards building world class products.”

ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

“Frank Dumas”

 

FRANK DUMAS, PRESIDENT & CEO

Medias & Regulators Only 514.295.9878

About St-Georges

St-Georges is developing new technologies to solve the some of the most common environmental problems in the mining industry.

The Company controls directly or indirectly, through rights of first refusal, all of the active mineral tenures in Iceland. It also explores for nickel on the Julie Nickel Project & for industrial minerals on Quebec’s North Shore and for lithium and rare metals in Northern Quebec and in the Abitibi region. Headquartered in Montreal, St-Georges’ stock is listed on the CSE under the symbol SX, on the US OTC under the Symbol SXOOF and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol 85G1.

The Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or the accuracy of the contents of this release.

The release contains forwarding looking information and statements as defined by law including, without limitation, Canadian securities laws and the “safe harbor” provisions of the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“forward-looking statements”), respecting St-Georges’ plans to spin-out its subsidiary ZeU. which is intended to be listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange. Forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to materially differ from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements including that the spin-out may not be completed as planned or at all due to failure to obtain shareholder or regulatory approval ,the inability to complete the Acquisition, raise sufficient capital to adequately fund ZeU or a decision of the board of St-Georges not to proceed, which decision can be made at any time prior to closing. Forward-looking statements are based on the opinions and estimates of management at the date the statements are made and a number of assumptions that may prove to be incorrect, including, without limitation, assumptions about general business and economic conditions, the timing and receipt of required approval and continued availability of capital and financing. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements contained herein. The foregoing list is not exhaustive and St-Georges undertakes no obligation to update any of the foregoing except as required by law.

St-Georges Eco-Mining $SX.ca $SXOOF Announces Spin-Out of Subsidiary #ZeU Crypto Networks & Intellectual Property Acquisition Agreement Amendment with Tiande $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:18 PM on Tuesday, May 22nd, 2018

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  • Intends to spin-out its subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc.,
    • intent of listing ZeU on the Canadian Securities Exchange
  • Transaction is being undertaken to focus the efforts of St-Georges on its core mining, metallurgical processes and commodities management technologies related activities,
    • Seeking to maximize shareholder value of the technologies to be acquired by ZeU by placing them in a separate public company

Montreal, QC / May 22, 2018 – St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE: SX) (OTC: SXOOF) (FSE: 85G1) announces that it intends to spin-out its subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc., with the intent of listing ZeU on the Canadian Securities Exchange. The transaction is being undertaken to focus the efforts of St-Georges on its core mining, metallurgical processes and commodities management technologies related activities, while seeking to maximize shareholder value of the technologies to be acquired by ZeU by placing them in a separate public company. The spin-out will allow ZeU management to initiate and grow operations with no further restrictions.

Shareholders to receive one ZeU share for every 8 St-Georges shares.

It is proposed that the spin-out would be effected by way of a plan of arrangement (the “Arrangement”) which would see shareholders of St-Georges receive an aggregate of 11,249,825 shares of ZeU, representing one (1) share of ZeU for every eight (8) shares of St-Georges held, and St-Georges would retain 8,750,175, of the 20,000,000 shares of ZeU St-Georges currently owns. Additional information regarding distributions to shareholders will be disclosed by way of circular in the coming weeks.

Financing

ZeU is planning to complete an initial tranche of the previously announced debenture financing, prior to the spin-out, for up to an aggregate amount of $10 million dollars. The company won’t seek additional amounts within that proposed financing and will instead initiate a separate private placement in parallel to the Spin-Out transaction (“Concurrent Financing”) to be completed concurrently with the Arrangement by way of subscription receipt of ZeU (the “Subscription Receipts”) at a price of C$1,000 per Subscription Receipt. Upon closing of the Arrangement, each holder of Subscription Receipts will receive, for no additional consideration and subject to adjustment, one special warrant (the “Special Warrants”) that, upon the satisfaction of certain conditions, shall be automatically exercised, for no additional consideration, to acquire $1,000 principal amount of 10% unsecured convertible debentures of ZeU (each, a “Convertible Debenture” and, collectively, the “Convertible Debentures”). Each Convertible Debenture shall be convertible into common shares of ZeU, as applicable, at a price of $1.00 per share, subject to adjustment in certain events.

Further details of the spin-out transaction, the Arrangement and the Concurrent Financing will be contained in the management information circular to be mailed to shareholders of St-Georges and filed on SEDAR in connection with the meeting of shareholders to be held to approve the transaction, currently contemplated to be held in July 2018. The Arrangement remains subject to approval by the shareholders of St-Georges, receipt of a final court order from the Superior Court of Quebec, and the approval of the listing of ZeU by the Canadian Securities Exchange. Notwithstanding the receipt of all requisite approvals, the directors of St-Georges reserve the right to elect to not to proceed with the Arrangement.

Amendment to Tiande Assets Acquisition Agreement

St-Georges also wishes to inform that, further to its February 26, 2018 press releases, ZeU has signed an agreement amending (the “Amending Agreement”) certain terms and conditions of its definitive asset purchase agreement dated February 23, 2018 with Qingdao Tiande Technologies Limited (“Qingdao”) and Beijing Tiande Technologies Limited (“Beijing” and together with Qingdao, the “Vendors”) with the intervention of Guiyang Tiande Technologies Limited to purchase substantially all the intellectual property of the Vendors (the “Acquisition”).

The purpose of the Amending Agreement is to eliminate uncertainties related to the closing of the Acquisition, expedite the Arrangement, which will allow ZeU to fully commit to the development of the Vendors’ Blockchain Technology, and facilitate the Concurrent Financing.

The material terms of the Amending Agreement are the removal of the minimum $10,000,000 concurrent financing condition, and the reorganization of the purchase price to provide for: (i) the delivery on the closing date, which will now occur concurrently with the completion of the Arrangement, to Vendors of 30,000,000 common shares of ZeU and 75,000,000 common share purchase warrants of ZeU exercisable at of $1.00 for a period of three years (3 years) following the listing of ZeU on a recognize stock exchange; (ii) the delivery, to the extent and only if all of the Milestone Conditions (please see February 26, 2018 press releases for details) are satisfied, an additional 45,000,000 common shares of ZeU; and (iii) the delivery, to the extent and only if the Patent Condition (please see February 26, 2018 press releases for details) is satisfied, of a final 75,000,000 common shares of ZeU.

The Acquisition remains subject to requisite regulatory approval and satisfaction of closing conditions contained in the agreement, including completion of the Arrangement.

ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

“Frank Dumas”

FRANK DUMAS, PRESIDENT & CEO

Medias and Regulators Only: 514.295.9878

About St-Georges

St-Georges is developing new technologies to solve the some of the most common environmental problems in the mining industry.

The Company controls directly or indirectly, through rights of first refusal, all of the active mineral tenures in Iceland. It also explores for nickel on the Julie Nickel Project & for industrial minerals on Quebec’s North Shore and for lithium and rare metals in Northern Quebec and in the Abitibi region. Headquartered in Montreal, St-Georges’ stock is listed on the CSE under the symbol SX, on the US OTC under the Symbol SXOOF and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol 85G1.

The Canadian Securities Exchange (CSE) has not reviewed and does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or the accuracy of the contents of this release.

The release contains forwarding looking information and statements as defined by law including, without limitation, Canadian securities laws and the “safe harbor” provisions of the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“forward-looking statements”), respecting St-Georges’ plans to spin-out its subsidiary ZeU. which is intended to be listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange. Forward-looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results to materially differ from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements including that the spin-out may not be completed as planned or at all due to failure to obtain shareholder or regulatory approval ,the inability to complete the Acquisition, raise sufficient capital to adequately fund Zeu or a decision of the board of St-Georges not to proceed, which decision can be made at any time prior to closing. Forward-looking statements are based on the opinions and estimates of management at the date the statements are made and a number of assumptions that may prove to be incorrect, including, without limitation, assumptions about general business and economic conditions, the timing and receipt of required approval and continued availability of capital and financing. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements contained herein. The foregoing list is not exhaustive and St-Georges undertakes no obligation to update any of the foregoing except as required by law.

HTC’s new phone is all about the #blockchain $SX $SX.ca $IDK.ca #Blockstation $AAO.ca $HPQ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:25 AM on Wednesday, May 16th, 2018

  • There’s no doubt about it: “Blockchain” is the biggest tech buzzword of today, the equivalent of “web 2.0” at its heyday a decade ago, and naturally, everyone wants in.
  • Latest company to join the blockchain party is HTC, who has announced the HTC Exodus, a smartphone that fully embraces blockchain technology

Blockchain is a crucial technology that underlies Bitcoin. It’s a decentralized, cryptographically secured database that’s near-impossible to tamper with, which makes it great for securely storing financial transactions data. But after Ethereum expanded on Bitcoin’s original idea, letting anyone run fully fledged apps on the blockchain, we’ve seen everyone jump on the bandwagon, from photography companies to burger chains.

So is HTC just riding the hype without much substance? Not necessarily.

On a teaser website, HTC says the phone will be “dedicated to decentralized applications and security.” The company lists several ways in which the Exodus phone will do this: For example, it will support decentralized applications (Dapps) and it will have a hardware element that will connect to cryptocurrency wallets. Both of these are doable: There’s already a phone called Sikur that focuses on security and has a built-in cryptocurrency wallet, and Sirin labs has announced its cryptocurrency-oriented Finney phone in May.

HTC also claims that every Exodus phone will be a node — a vital part of Bitcoin and Ethereum’s architecture, which broadcasts messages across the network. “We want to double and triple the number of nodes of Ethereum and Bitcoin,” HTC’s site says. The idea is interesting, but running a node eats up processing power, storage and bandwidth. It’s already possible to run a Bitcoin or an Ethereum node on a smartphone, but optimizing this for the mass market is not trivial.

There’s no word on the phone’s specs, though things like camera performance would likely be secondary to the phone’s utility as a blockchain-friendly device.

For this project, HTC has assembled a team led by Phil Chen, who was one of the architects behind the Barnes & Noble Nook, as well as a long-time product manager at HTC.

There’s no word on the price, either, but you can already reserve the phone by giving up your email, here.

Source: https://mashable.com/2018/05/16/htc-exodus/#0KD87U04piq2

#Facebook is reportedly starting a #blockchain team $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:56 AM on Wednesday, May 9th, 2018
  • Facebook is reportedly shaking up its management team in a gigantic way today
  • Head of the company’s popular Facebook Messenger app will now be in charge of “a new internal team dedicated to exploring blockchain technology.”

No, not Bitcoin: Blockchain is the encrypted-in-plain-sight technology that can make for trustworthy transactions online.

May 8, 20181:19 PM PDT

Facebook is reportedly shaking up its management team in a gigantic way today — and according to Recode, the head of the company’s popular Facebook Messenger app will now be in charge of “a new internal team dedicated to exploring blockchain technology.”

Recode reports that several prominent Instagram executives will be joining the blockchain team as well.

You might be wondering: What is Blockchain? And why would Facebook be pursuing the technology? We’ve got a whole article dedicated to answering the former question — not to mention our series Blockchain Decoded — but if you’re in a hurry:

Blockchain is the digital ledger technology that famously powers cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, but is more generally an encrypted way to keep a record of digital transactions, and can be used as a way to figure out who to trust online.

Recode doesn’t say specifically why Facebook might be looking into Blockchain right now, and Facebook didn’t immediately respond to our request for comment.

But in his January memo, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote that he wanted to study decentralizing technologies like encryption and cryptocurrency — “that take power from centralized systems and put it back into people’s hands,” in his words — and figure out how to use them in Facebook’s services.

Blockchain’s promise hasn’t kept pace with the hype, but it’s catching on for everything from tracking shipments through ports and across oceans to guaranteeing the provenance of a diamond necklace. At Facebook, it could be used in any number of areas, from running advertising infrastructure to easing person-to-person e-commerce to assuring user identities in an era of scams and bots. Facebook has a lot of users and a lot of industry clout, and that increases the importance of any efforts to form industry-spanning partnerships built on blockchain.

That said, exploring blockchain is hardly a surprise. In this day and age, a tech company doing so is about as shocking as exploring mobile phone apps or artificial intelligence tools.

Disclosure: Sean’s wife works for Facebook as an internal video producer.

Source: https://www.cnet.com/news/facebook-is-reportedly-starting-a-blockchain-team/

#Blockchain As An Application Platform $SX $SX.ca $IDK.ca #Blockstation $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:30 AM on Monday, May 7th, 2018
  • Many business use cases can be improved and/or solved by using distributed ledger technology
  • Can be used in many cases where trust services are needed by business applications
  • Can be utilized by using blockchain technology as an application platform to build the underlying trust infrastructure of the system

Issam (Sam) Andoni

Seasoned technologist and recognized expert in the field of IDM, Security and Access Management, and the use of PKI technology.

 Issam (Sam) Andoni , Forbes Councils

Shutterstock

Many business use cases can be improved and/or solved by using distributed ledger technology. It can be used in many cases where trust services are needed by business applications. This can be utilized by using blockchain technology as an application platform to build the underlying trust infrastructure of the system.

Although Bitcoin, the first real implementation of blockchain, is a decentralized currency and payment system, the underlying constructs that form the basis of the system do not have to be limited to payment transactions, accounts, balances or users. Instead, blockchain technology in Bitcoin is nothing more than transactions secured and executed by a scripting language using cryptographic methods. This means that blockchain is a platform with a scripting language that can solve many use cases other than just cryptocurrencies.

This property of blockchain led to smart contracts, an innovation presented by the cryptocurrency known as Ethereum. In the case of Ethereum, developers can create private cryptocurrencies and contract-based applications using a Turing-complete language, which allows businesses to use this language to set their own rules and policies in such applications.

The distributed ledger technology used in blockchain offers multiple benefits to businesses that make a difference when implementing a solution that requires a high degree of trust for business transactions. Using the technology offers the possibility to reduce costs and offers the opportunity for businesses to build and maintain an infrastructure that delivers capabilities at lower expenses than traditional centralized models.

Blockchain can process transactions faster because it doesn’t use a centralized infrastructure. Although there is no system totally secure from cyberattacks, the distributed nature of blockchain provides an unprecedented level of trust. The unchangeable property of blockchain and its public availability among its users, whether in a public ledger or a private one, provides transparency. Any user of the system can query transactions on a real-time basis.

Blockchain For Cryptocurrency

Bitcoin was the first implementation of a cryptocurrency based on distributed ledger technology. It was invented in 2009. and since then, it has been gaining popularity and traction by business owners seeking a distributed trust model. The Bitcoin consensus algorithm is based on proof of work (PoW). In PoW, transactions are collected into blocks by miners and added to the blockchain only if the miner can solve a cryptographic challenge that requires much computational power to be solved. The cryptographic challenge can only be solved by guessing, ensuring neutrality.

Other forms of proofs have been invented and incorporated into other solutions, such as the proof of stake in Ethereum and proof of elapsed time introduced by Intel.

Bitcoin and blockchain solved a very old digital currency problem that many other digital currencies tried to solve in the past known as the double spending problem. Double spending means spending the same digital currency twice, and Bitcoin solved this by ensuring distributed consensus.

Another cryptocurrency benefit that blockchain technology provides is that transfers can cross national boundaries in seconds, with minimum fees, and without going through third-party entities such as banks.

Read entire article here: https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbestechcouncil/2018/05/07/blockchain-as-an-application-platform/#e679c405576e

Why #Blockchain, Why Now? $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca $AAO.ca $HPQ.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:17 AM on Friday, April 27th, 2018
  • Blockchains record trust like an atomic clock records time
  • Unlike trust, time marches ever forward and is irreversible 

Dante Disparte , Contributor

Burkley. Washington state. USA USA dollars bills in God we trust 29 December 2014. hoto by Francis Joseph Dean/Deanpictures) (Photo by Francis Dean/Corbis via Getty Images)

Blockchains record trust like an atomic clock records time. Unlike trust, time marches ever forward and is irreversible.  What if trust could be recorded in the same manner, with exactly the same accuracy and fidelity? Trust can be lost just as soon as it is gained because of our reliance on experiential, opaque and analog methods of recording it.  When someone says “trust me” it usually engenders doubt.  Blockchain technology can change that.  Each year for the last 18 years, Edelman, a global public relations firm, has issued a report called the Trust Barometer. While the study is a compelling snapshot in time of global attitudes and perceptions of trust in public and private institutions, the more interesting insights are gleaned by looking at this body of work longitudinally. By this measure, Edelman’s most recent Trust Barometer confirms the sentiments we have seen driving unprecedented outcomes in ballot boxes, on streets and in the market.

The surprising Brexit vote and the election of President Trump, which was a veritable trans-Atlantic echo where voters sowed the seeds of their distrust in status quo irrespective of the consequences, are two macro-level examples of the trust deficit.  Indeed, following the Brexit vote, search terms for “what is Brexit?” and more troublingly, “what is the EU?” spiked in the U.K., showing the combustible political mix of antiestablishment tendencies, blended with populism and two-speed economic recovery.  Many pollsters and analysts missed just how deep this wellspring of mistrust really is and only six newspapers in the U.S. were in favor of the antiestablishment candidate Trump. The erosion of institutional trust is borne, in no small measure, out of opacity, informational asymmetries and agency issues that prop up status quo and friction-laden institutions.  Other than climate change, extreme income inequality and pandemics, the global trust deficit may be one of the world’s direst challenges – noting that they are all interconnected.  The trust deficit is the wellspring that irrigates the seeds of political risk and social polarization reversing the course on globalization and multilateralism.

Against this complex backdrop, blockchains are no panacea, but with the right blend of leadership and institutional shifts from analog to digital, and eventually to decentralized structures, we can begin arresting the trust deficit.  Markets, customers, investors and other stakeholders have all grown tired of learning about the misdeeds of large organizations during rare glimpses of sunlight that creeps through the crevices. Recent examples include Equifax executives selling stock days after a massive breach was discovered that exposed nearly the entire U.S. workforce to a lifetime of identity and financial risk. The massive account rigging scandal at Wells Fargo is another recent example that conspired to fuel growing distrust and anger in the market. Companies and institutions are responding to this trust deficit in many ways, often with the opposite expected outcomes. Starbucks’ recent decision to close 8,000 its U.S. stores on May 29 in response to the wrongful arrest of two black patrons at a store in Philadelphia may be such an overreaction to regain trust. The slow and somewhat tone-deaf response from Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s media-shy CEO, following the Cambridge Analytica scandal, which may have had election-swaying impacts, certainly contributed to Facebook’s trust deficit.  Although counter-intuitively Facebook has enjoyed a 50% quarterly revenue gain, showing that the platform may be too big to avoid or there is a lag effect in the market.

This corporate trust deficit is not singularly a U.S. phenomenon, as the Volkswagen emission-rigging scandal confirmed the cynical view that in the pursuit of growth there is no triple bottom line.  Indeed, institutional misdeeds have shown that there may be no ethical lines at all in the pursuit of profit, power maximization and preservation.  From finance, to elections, to combating fake news or guaranteeing supply chain provenance, market participants are desperately searching for ways of asserting how trustworthy they are beyond corporate social responsibility, marketing initiatives and executive promissory statements. With the impressive wave of blockchain prototyping taking place in many sectors, the solution to this global trust deficit is beginning to see the light of day.  Indeed, some are beginning to argue – perhaps to blockchain’s detriment – that the mere mention of the technology confers a good housekeeping seal of trustworthiness – a veritable LEED certification of trust.

When blockchain, like the internet before it, fades to the background, it can begin changing the world.  For this to take place, many entrenched and centralized institutions, which have become the single points of failure in the global economy accruing an embarrassment of power and riches, will need to be transformed.  Blockchain will not take these bricks apart one by one, contrary to the whims of technology investors, crypto-utopians and speculators.  Rather, these groups will be forced to change by the growing trust deficit that is sandblasting the veneer from even the most sacrosanct institutions. If the internet created a world of low fiction communication, blockchain can create a world of low fiction value transfer, in no small measure because of the irrevocable way in which it records trust.

It is worth noting that bitcoin and the rise of cryptocurrencies as a trillion-dollar asset class in 2017, was spurred without the oversight of a central bank or monetary authority guaranteeing trust or market conduct. Code and the bitcoin blockchain achieved a level of trust that millions of people, thousands of regulators and hundreds of enforcement agencies around the world struggle to maintain – all in a fraction of the time, with a higher degree of security and an infinitesimally lower cost.  However, for the true impacts of this technology (like the internet before it) to take hold, the conversation needs to shift from how to why and the technology must recede. We are at the very crest of the blockchain hype cycle where there is a lot of sizzle, little steak and the occasional setback or indictments.  All of this denotes progress.

Unfortunately, entrenched centralized institutions from politics, business and civil society, have little interest in truly deconstructing their business models to withstand the trust age. This is a similarly perilous play as the traditional media firms that ignored the rise of their digital twins, or the box retailers that ignored the rise of Amazon – same outcomes, more efficient delivery.  Ever since the Bretton Woods system pegged the global economy to promissory statements made behind closed doors and affixed on physical currencies emblazoned with words like In God We Trust, trust became the world’s thrift.  This rules-based system is being challenged by the return of economic nationalism and trade wars.  Indeed, proto-currencies that predate their pecuniary and digital twins by many thousands of years relied on many of the same mechanics as the cryptocurrencies that are the latest offshoots of our need for trust-based value exchange.

The world is facing many deliberate and unintended distortions of our social, economic and political order.  In short, complex forces are arrayed against the institutions that sowed post-war stability and trust is the first casualty in this war.  Social media platforms, such as Twitter, which the U.S. president has come to rely on almost singularly to convey his political, military and economic messages, is rife with fake news inducing bots, which comprise nearly 50 million of the platform’s users driving an outsized volume of site traffic.  Facebook proved to be an efficient backdoor for micro-targeting the minds of millions of voters, further isolating people in information bubbles of their own “truth.”  An equally unprecedented wave of complex risks, from climate change to cyber threats, calls into question the value of citizenship in even the most powerful economies in the world.  Puerto Rico’s plight is very much the canary in the climate change coal mine.  60% of FEMA claims being denied to households in Puerto Rico due to challenges evidencing property ownership highlights the critical flaw of relying on paper-based analog records in a risk-prone digital world.  In this world, a dollar may be worthless, a vote uncounted, a politician unaccountable and a contract unenforceable.  Blockchain can bridge these gaps and shore up the erosion of trust.  To do this, adopting blockchain technology in large institutions that benefit from status quo is more about leadership and a frame of mind, than it is about technology or digital transformation.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/dantedisparte/2018/04/26/why-blockchain-why-now/#db0fb1b4f428

JPMorgan $JPM National Bank of Canada $NA.ca others test debt issuance on #blockchain $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca $AAO.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:24 AM on Friday, April 20th, 2018
  • The platform was built over more than a year using Quorum, a type of open-source blockchain that JPMorgan has developed inhouse.
  • Banks have poured millions of dollars to develop blockchain to streamline processes ranging from cross-border payments to securities settlement.
  • JPMorgan is considering spinning off Quorum because the technology has attracted significant outside interest.

Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Pedestrians cross a foot bridge towards the offices of global financial institutions, including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and the commercial office block No. 1 Canada Square, in the Canary Wharf financial, shopping and business district in London, U.K.

J. P. Morgan Chase & Co has tested a new blockchain platform for issuing financial instruments with the National Bank of Canada and other large firms, they said on Friday, seeking to streamline origination, settlement, interest rate payments and other processes.

The test on Wednesday mirrored the Canadian bank’s $150 million offering on the same day of a one-year floating-rate Yankee certificate of deposit, they said in a statement. The platform was built over more than a year using Quorum, a type of open-source blockchain that JPMorgan has developed inhouse and is in discussions to spin off.

Participants in the experiment included Goldman Sachs Asset Management, the fund management arm of Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Pfizer Inc and Legg Mason Inc’s Western Asset and other investors in the certificate of deposit.

Banks have poured millions of dollars to develop blockchain, the software first created to run cryptocurrency bitcoin, to streamline processes ranging from cross-border payments to securities settlement.

“Blockchain-related technologies have the potential to bring about major change in the financial services industry,” David Furlong, senior vice president of artificial intelligence, venture capital and blockchain at National Bank of Canada, said in a statement.

JPMorgan is considering spinning off Quorum because the technology has attracted significant outside interest, Umar Farooq, head of blockchain initiatives for JPMorgan’s corporate and investment bank said in an interview.

He said it was taking too much time to field requests for help from users at other companies.

Charging for assistance is not an option because software support is not the bank’s business, a person familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity. The source was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

The spin-off discussions are in the early stages and the bank has received interest from financial institutions and large enterprise technology companies, Farooq added. He declined to name the companies.

JPMorgan plans to beef up the Quorum team with dozens of engineers from the bank’s other divisions who have become familiar with the technology, he said.

Blockchain is in the early stages of development in the financial industry, but JPMorgan is optimistic about its potential, Farooq said.

“We haven’t really seen a lot of really large scale things go into production yet. There are few cases where blockchain can really shine.”

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/20/jpmorgan-national-bank-of-canada-others-test-debt-issuance-on-blockchain.html

Former Goldman Sachs $GS VP Joins #Crypto Wallet #Blockchain To Attract Institutional Clients $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca #Blockstation #Earnings

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:00 PM on Tuesday, April 17th, 2018
  • Crypto wallet Blockchain.com has hired former Goldman Sachs executive Breanne Madigan as the head of institutional sales and strategy
  • Madigan had worked at Goldman Sachs from 2003 to 2017 as an associate, vice president, and finally as the head of institutional wealth services, a department that managed $1.49 trln worth of total assets in 2017, CNBC reports.

Blockchain.com, which has 24 mln active wallets according to CNBC, added a buy and sell feature for Bitcoin (BTC) – with Ethereum (ETH) and Bitcoin Cash (BCH) promised soon after – in 22 US states in mid-January of this year.

Peter Smith, the CEO of Blockchain.com, said in a statement that “Breanne has a proven track record of adding value to her teams and her clients,” continuing:

“As Blockchain continues to grow its institutional presence, I can think of no one better to help scale our business.”

In what seems to be a growing trend of former Wall Street talent and money moving to the crypto sphere, a report circulated last week that Goldman Sachs executive Richard Kim would be hired as the new chief operating officer of a crypto merchant bank founded and run by former Wall Street executive Mike Novogratz. A little more than a week ago, George Soros’s Fund Management has been reported to soon begin trading in crypto, and the Rockefeller’s venture capital arm formed a partnership with a crypto investment group to support Blockchain and crypto innovation.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/former-goldman-sachs-vp-joins-crypto-wallet-blockchain-to-attract-institutional-clients