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Don’t Confuse #Bitcoin With #Blockchain Technology $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:15 PM on Wednesday, March 14th, 2018

Mat Litalien | March 14, 2018 | More on: HBLK HIVE

  • Bitcoin and blockchain technology are often incorrectly used interchangeably.
  • Although the Bitcoin and blockchain are closely related, it is important to note that they are not one and the same

As an example, take this headline from Cointelegraph: “Goldman Sachs Will Start Bank Money ‘Stampede’ Into Bitcoin: Ritholtz CEO”. At first glance, an investor could be tricked into thing that Goldman Sachs is about to get into Bitcoin, when in effect, the quote from Wealth Management CEO Josh Brown does not even mention Bitcoin.

Likewise, Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, has been criticized for calling Bitcoin a “fraud.” However, did you know that JP Morgan is actively engaged in developing blockchain technology?

Although the Bitcoin and blockchain are closely related, it is important to note that they are not one and the same.

Let’s start with Bitcoin. Bitcoin was the first and the best-known unregulated cryptocurrency. Bitcoin is the cryptocurrency for which blockchain was invented. Therein lies why the confusion between the two exists. Bitcoin is a medium of exchange, like the Canadian dollar, intended to simplify transactions and eliminate the need for third-party payment processing such as banks and PayPal.

Bitcoin, like other cryptocurrencies, is digital and is considered to have no intrinsic value. It is unregulated in the sense that its supply is not determined by a central bank. Bitcoin is not a file saved on a computer. It is represented by transactions recorded on a peer-to-peer network. Bitcoin can be used to purchase goods and services where accepted.

Blockchain is the technology on which Bitcoin was built and goes far and beyond cryptocurrencies. It is anonymous, distributed, public, and encrypted. Blockchain maintains the Bitcoin transaction ledger. There are thousands of blockchains that exist, all influenced by the original Bitcoin blockchain.

The attractiveness of blockchain technology is easy to understand. Because it is distributed, there is no central database, and it runs on computers worldwide, which makes it very difficult to hack. It is public, which means that anyone can view it any time, offering an unprecedented level of transparency. It also makes use of two-key encryption, which enables unmatched virtual security.

Businesses have come to learn that blockchain technology can be adapted for use in many other areas. Specifically, many companies are investigating the use of blockchain to improve and speed up business processes. It can lead to cheaper and faster financial settlements that could save companies billions in transaction costs. It can transform the way governments are elected by producing immediately verifiable voting results. Canada has long struggled with a true electronic patient medical record due to the significant privacy regulations. Could an electronic medical record built on blockchain technology be the answer? What about solving the corruption surrounding foreign aid? Blockchain can hold organizations more accountable through increased transparency.

Investors wanting to invest in blockchain technology can do so by taking a position in Harvest Portfolio’s Blockchain Technologies ETF (TSX:HBLK). The ETF was only recently launched in February and will invest in companies that are leading the blockchain revolution. Its holdings include development companies such as HIVE Blockchain Technologies Ltd. (TSXV:HIVE), Overstock.com Inc., BTL Group Ltd., and BIG Blockchain Intelligence Group Inc. Likewise, it has stakes in some of the larger players in the tech industry who have shown a keen interest in blockchain technology, such as Intel Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, and Visa Inc.

The applications for blockchain technology are endless. Bitcoin has been revolutionary and continues to be the most widely accepted form of cryptocurrency. However, investors need to understand that if a company is invested in blockchain technology, it does not equate to Bitcoin. They can be investigating the use of blockchain for several possible reasons. There exists a significant knowledge gap between the public and blockchain technology. As an investor, you need to be extra vigilant and understand what you are investing in.

While conflict overseas is all media talking-heads seem to mention these days, the billionaire founder of Tesla is losing sleep over what he sees as a far bigger threat.

Elon Musk Warns: This has “vastly more risk than North Korea”

If you missed your opportunity to get in on Google, Microsoft, or Amazon in their early days, don’t let it happen again. This emerging technology trend could offer a second chance for anyone who wishes they took part in these millionaire-maker stocks.

Source: https://www.fool.ca/2018/03/14/dont-confuse-bitcoin-with-blockchain-technology/

Eight Ways #Blockchain Will Impact The World Beyond #Cryptocurrency $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca #Blockstation

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:29 PM on Friday, March 9th, 2018
  • From banking and secure communications to healthcare and ride-sharing, blockchain will have a huge impact on our future
  • Of course, to understand how blockchain will change the world, you first need to understand how it works

Kage Spatz is a Strategist, Entrepreneur & CEO at Spacetwin — an innovative digital marketing and monetization agency.

From banking and secure communications to healthcare and ride-sharing, blockchain will have a huge impact on our future. Of course, to understand how blockchain will change the world, you first need to understand how it works.

Have you ever purchased coffee or produce that is labeled as a fair trade product? How can you trust that information? What about when you meet someone on a dating website? How do you know they’re really the 35-year-old startup founder and wakeboarder that they say they are?

Society today is filled with uncertainty and trust issues — and with valid reason. To be sure your purchase is really helping a coffee bean farmer in Ethiopia or that your date is actually who they say they are, you’d need a system with strong security where records are stored and facts are verified by many witnesses so that no one could cheat it.

Blockchain: Simplified

This type of system is called blockchain. No central person or company owns it. Rather, information is stored across a system of many personal computers so that there is no middleman. It’s decentralized and distributed so that no one person can take it down or corrupt it. However, anyone can use the system and help run it, as information is protected through cryptography.

It’s essentially an ever-growing list of transactions (listed in blocks) that are verified, permanently recorded and linked in chronological order. For most users, the beauty of blockchain will be in the unknown. Just as most of us are unaware of how 4G technology works or how silicon is processed to produce central processing units, we continue to use our smartphones on a daily basis. Similarly, blockchain will be a perfect “backstage” to many changing technologies and will impact the way we educate, manage, consume, govern and communicate.

How Blockchain Will Change the World

• Banking and Payments: Not only does blockchain allow anyone to exchange money faster, more efficiently and more securely (see bitcoin currency), but many banks are already working on adopting blockchain technology to improve their transactions.

• Cybersecurity: All data is verified and encrypted in blockchain using advanced cryptography, making it resistant to unauthorized changes and hacks. Centralized servers can be very susceptible to data loss, corruption, human error and hacking. Just look at the many hacks we’ve seen in the past few years with Target, Verizon, Deloitte and Equifax. Using a blockchain decentralized, distributed system would allow data storage in the cloud to be more robust and protected against attacks.

• Internet of Things: Today the Internet of Things (IoT) includes cars, buildings, doorbells and even refrigerators that are embedded with software, network connectivity and sensors. However, because these devices operate from a central location that handles communications, hackers can gain access to the car you’re driving or to your home. According to Kamil Przeorski, an expert in Bitcoin and Ethereum capabilities, Blockchain has the potential to address these critical security concerns because it decentralizes all of the information and data. This is increasingly more important as IoT capabilities increase.

• Unified Communications: Blockchains can enable faster, safer and more reliable automated communication. Automated or digital communication based on pre-built algorithms is already occurring at scale in some industries. Examples of this include emails, system alerts and call notifications. Matt Peterson, co-founder of Jive Communications and an early adopter and miner of Bitcoin told me that while a lot of communication is currently automated, this type of communication is generally non-critical and asynchronous. He said that “Blockchains can shift the playing field to allow authorized, bi-directional communications and transactions that occur more freely in an automated environment and produce an immutable record of communication.” This will greatly enhance the safety and reliability of our communications.

• Government: If corrupt politicians and long lines at the DMV give you a headache, you’re not alone. With blockchain, we could reduce bureaucracy and increase security, efficiency and transparency. Welfare and unemployment benefits could also be more easily verified and distributed and votes could be counted and verified for legitimacy.

• Crowdfunding and Donating to Charities: Donating to a worthy cause is never a bad idea. But what percentage of your donation is actually being given to those it’s meant for? Blockchains can help ensure that your money gets exactly where you need it to go. Bitcoin-based charities are already creating trust through smart contracts and online reputation systems and allowing donors to see where their donations go through a secure and transparent ledger. The United Nations’ World Food Programme is currently implementing blockchain technology to allow refugees to purchase food by using Iris scans instead of vouchers, cash or credit cards.

• Healthcare: Wouldn’t it be great if doctors did not have to “fax over referrals” anymore? Why can’t all of our medical information be stored in a central database? The centralization of such sensitive information makes it very vulnerable. With all of the private patient data that hospitals collect, a secure platform is necessary. With the advent of blockchain, hospitals and other healthcare organizations could create a centralized and secure database, store medical records and share them strictly with authorized doctors and patients.

• Rentals and Ride-sharing: Uber and Airbnb may seem like decentralized networks, but the platform owners are in complete control of the network and naturally take a fee for their service. Blockchain can create decentralized peer-to-peer ride-sharing apps and can allow car owners to auto pay for things like parking, tolls and fuel.

While blockchain is still relatively new and many experiments will fail before they succeed, the possibilities for innovation are endless. Along with the eight points listed, it will affect retail, energy management, online music, supply chain management, forecasting, consulting, real estate, insurance and much more. Let’s prepare ourselves for a future where distributed, autonomous solutions will have a huge role — both in our personal lives and in business.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/theyec/2018/03/09/eight-ways-blockchain-will-impact-the-world-beyond-cryptocurrency/2/#311824a1300b

#Crypto exchanges, raking in billions, emerge as kings of #coins #Bitcoin #Ether #Blockstation

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:55 PM on Monday, March 5th, 2018
  • Digital-asset exchanges are emerging as one of the biggest winners of the cryptocurrency boom
  • Top 10 are generating at least $40-million daily in fees and as much as $350-million
  • Fees in the lowest range of the exchanges’ scale were used for the calculations

Ahn Young-joon/AP

Camila Russo
Bloomberg News
Published 2 hours ago Updated March 5, 2018

Digital-asset exchanges are emerging as one of the biggest winners of the cryptocurrency boom.

The top 10 are generating at least $40-million daily in fees and as much as $350-million, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg using trading volume reported on data tracker CoinMarketCap.com and fee information on the exchanges’ websites. Fees in the lowest range of the exchanges’ scale were used for the calculations.

The projections are a rough estimate as it’s near impossible to know what exactly the closely held firms are charging, including discounts for their most active traders. Based on daily trading volume and fees listed, annual revenue for the top 10 goes into the billions of dollars. While the numbers aren’t exact, the order of magnitude shows the boom in virtual currencies is generating some very real cash.

“The exchanges and transaction processors are the biggest winners in the space because they’re allowing people to transact and participate in this burgeoning sector,” said Gil Luria, an equity analyst at D.A. Davidson & Co, who reviewed the methodology for the revenue estimates. “There’s a big business there and it would not surprise me if they’re making hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue and possibly even billions a year.”

Tokyo-based Binance and Hong Kong-based OKEx are handling the largest volume of trading, equal to about $1.7-billion daily. Based on fees of 0.2 percentage point, which are higher than OKEx’s 0.07 percentage point for the most active traders, Binance is likely bringing in the most cash per day.

Huobi, Bitfinex, Upbit and Bithumb, which are all based in Asia, come next in the ranking. They process between $600-million and $1.4-billion of trading volume and charge fees of 0.3 percentage point on average. More than half of the crypto currency trading happens in Asia-based exchanges, according to data compiled by smart contract platform Aelf.

Asia’s influence in crypto trading can be explained by a concentration of cryptocurrency mining in the region from Bitcoin’s early days, as miners took advantage of cheaper electricity costs, said Aelf co-founder Zhuling Chen. Other reasons include the region’s young population, which adopts new technology quickly, consumers that are comfortable with mobile payments, and even a strong gaming culture, which incentivizes virtual transactions, said Chen. Tightening regulation in the region, with China and South Korea restricting trading and initial coin offerings, also means that Asian firms have been forced to become global, he said.

Binance’s prominence is notable considering the firm started operating in July. It shifted headquarters to Japan from Shanghai after the Chinese government tightened its grasp on the industry late last year. The firm can process 1.4 million orders per second, which it says makes it one of the fastest exchanges in the market.

Its loose customer accreditation process may also explain its growth, said Chris Slaughter, co-founder of crypto investment platform Samsa. It’s also very reliable, he said.

“They don’t make users go through the know-your-customer process until withdrawal,” Slaughter said. “It’s a complicated process. You can lose customers in the two or four hours that it takes. In Binance, you can go from not having an account to having funds on an account in less than 20 minutes.”

South Korean exchange Upbit, which is among the top five in trading volume, only started operating in October. It’s controlled by Dunamu Inc., which also owns Kakao Talk, the most popular messaging app in Korea. Upbit is integrated in Kakao Talk and lists over 120 cryptocurrencies, thanks to a partnership with the U.S.-based exchange Bittrex.

All of the exchanges are privately held and only a few years old, which often means it’s difficult to find financial information or details on management. HitBTC, the 10th largest, doesn’t provide any information on who runs it or where the firm is based, even as customers asked these questions on the exchange’s forum. Bit-Z, WEX and EXX, among the 20 biggest by trading volume, are some of the others that don’t provide those details either.

Bitfinex, among the five biggest, has come under heavier scrutiny as the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission sent subpoenas to the company in December.

Potential competition from public companies and traditional financial firms may push crypto exchanges to be more transparent and even reduce costs, said Slaughter.

“More conventional businesses like banks and funds are likely to acquire crypto platforms at some point to make sure they have a strategic foothold in the market,” he said. “It’s a no-brainer. Financial services is where all the real business revenue in crypto is.”

Source: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/investment-ideas/crypto-exchanges-raking-in-billions-emerge-as-kings-of-coins/article38209941/

St-Georges Eco-Mining $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF Subsidiary #ZeU #Crypto Signs Definitive Agreement with Tiande $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:01 PM on Monday, February 26th, 2018

Sx large

  • Wholly owned subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks signed a definitive asset purchase agreement dated February 23, 2018 with Qingdao Tiande Technologies Limited and Beijing Tiande Technologies Limited with the intervention of Guiyang Tiande Technologies Limited
  • ZeU will acquire the Vendor’s intellectual property
  • Purchase price for the Acquisition shall be up to 150,000,000 common shares of ZeU and 150,000,000 Share purchase warrants

Montreal / February 26, 2018 – St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE: SX) (OTC: SXOOF) (FSE: 85G1) announces that, further to its January 15 and February 8, 2018 press releases, its wholly owned subsidiary ZeU Crypto Networks Inc. has signed a definitive asset purchase agreement dated February 23, 2018 with Qingdao Tiande Technologies Limited and Beijing Tiande Technologies Limited with the intervention of Guiyang Tiande Technologies Limited to purchase substantially all the intellectual property of the Vendors.

The following are the material terms of the agreement:

  • – ZeU will acquire the Vendor’s intellectual property (including without limitation, all intellectual property and patent applications directly or indirectly related to the Blockchain and smart contract technologies of the Vendors (the “Blockchain Technology”), including without limitation, BigData, IoB, Sandbox) (the “IP”)
  • – the Vendors will complete: (i) the transfer and successful employment by ZeU of all key employees; (ii) the transfer and assignment of all the IP to ZeU; (iii) the obtaining of all regulatory approvals should they be required; and (iv) the obtaining of all required consents including all consents from clients and collaborators pursuant to the existing contracts of the Vendors (the “Milestone Conditions”)
  • – ZeU, the Vendors and key collaborators will enter into a license agreement and non-competition covenant which will provide, among other things, that ZeU shall irrevocably grant a perpetual , exclusive, transferable and sub-licensable license to the Vendors for use of the Blockchain Technology in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan
  • – ZeU will have completed or caused to be completed prior to the Closing Date a debenture financing of not less than $10,000,000 and up to $30,000,000 (the “Concurrent Financing”)

The purchase price for the Acquisition shall be up to 150,000,000 common shares of ZeU (each a “Share” and 150,000,000 Share purchase warrants (each a “Warrant”) to the Vendors, satisfied by (i) the delivery of a total of 65,000,000 Shares and 75,000,000 Warrants on the closing date of the Acquisition (the “Closing Date”), (ii) to the extent and only if all of the Milestone Conditions (as defined hereinabove) are satisfied, the delivery of an additional 75,000,000 Shares, within 3 Business Days following the satisfaction of the Milestone Conditions or the Closing Date (whichever is later) and (iii) to the extent and only if twenty (20) new patents pertaining to the Blockchain Technology are issued (the “Patent Condition”), the delivery of an additional 75,000,000 Shares, within 3 Business Days following the satisfaction of the Patent Condition.

Each Warrant will be exercisable at a price equal to the conversion price pursuant to the Concurrent Financing for a period of three (3) years following the date ZeU completes a transaction pursuant to which its Shares will either be listed on a recognized stock exchange in North America, or will be exchanged for common shares of a reporting issuer listed on a recognized stock exchange in North America.

The agreement was negotiated at arm’s length, and contains customary representations, warranties and closing conditions.

On closing of the Acquisition, Dr. Wei Tek Tsai is to join ZeU’s management as Chief Technology Officer.

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

The Acquisition remains subject to a number of conditions as set forth in the agreement, including (without limitation), the completion of the Concurrent Financing (as defined hereinabove), the receipt of all requisite regulatory approvals and satisfaction of closing conditions contained in the agreement.

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.

INTERVIEW: Augusta Industries $AAO.ca With Real #Blockchain In A Real Company With Real Data and Real Revenues $HIVE.ca $CODE.ca $BLOC.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:35 AM on Friday, February 16th, 2018

DC #Blockchain Hearing Sees Call for Congressional Commission $SX $SX.ca $IDK.ca $AAO.ca #Blockstation

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:03 AM on Thursday, February 15th, 2018
  • Members of the U.S. House of Representatives got a crash course on blockchain today, with subcommittees of the Science, Space and Technology Committee meeting to hear testimony on the tech
  • During the “Beyond Bitcoin: Emerging Applications for Blockchain Technology” hearing, the House Subcommittee on Research and Technology and the Subcommittee on Oversight asked a range of questions, primarily aimed at getting a sense of which use cases have attracted the most attention today – and could, in theory, wind up being used by the U.S. government itself.
Feb 14, 2018 at 21:20 UTC  |  Updated  Feb 14, 2018 at 21:25 UTC

Members of the U.S. House of Representatives got a crash course on blockchain today, with subcommittees of the Science, Space and Technology Committee meeting to hear testimony on the tech.

During the “Beyond Bitcoin: Emerging Applications for Blockchain Technology” hearing, the House Subcommittee on Research and Technology and the Subcommittee on Oversight asked a range of questions, primarily aimed at getting a sense of which use cases have attracted the most attention today – and could, in theory, wind up being used by the U.S. government itself.

Ultimately, the witnesses would recommend that Congress set up a legal framework which would encourage and, perhaps, even fund research into uses of the technology within the public sphere.

“I would encourage Congress to commission a blockchain advisory group,” said Aaron Wright, an associate clinical professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and co-director of its Blockchain Project.

He later elaborated:

“So the idea with the blockchain commission would be to provide a degree of uniformity and a unified approach to the numerous regulatory decisions. Some issues raised by the witnesses today – there’s privacy issue, identity issues, consumer protection, commodities laws, and there’s competing interpretations that have been issued already by federal agencies, so the thought would be to standardize that.”

Applications, not regulations

The hearing pointedly sought to avoid a topic that has been a hot one, both in and outside of Washington, D.C.: regulation. While it was a subject that came up through witness testimony, chair Ralph Abraham (R-LA) said he wanted to focus on what he described as a potentially “transformative” technology.

To that end, the hearing called for examples of how the technology can be used, both in the private sector and by the federal government.

Representative Barbara Comstock (R.-VA) started listing use cases by noting that her personal information was likely stolen or compromised by a data breach at the Office of Personnel Management. As a result, she said she was “pleased” to hear about efforts to create more secure identity management platforms that uses blockchain as a means to encrypt data.

One notable topic of exploration came through Chris Jaikaran, a cybersecurity analyst from the Congressional Research Office, who discussed the tech’s use for underpinning voting systems.

“The blockchain doesn’t record the vote, it records the person, the identity, the voting. The vote itself is stored on another secure system,” he explained.

Frank Yiannas, vice president of food safety, Walmart Inc., detailed his company’s work with blockchain to the subcommittee members, explaining how the retail giant is using the tech to track food shipments.

Yiannas spoke on the pilot projects the retail giant had concluded already, explaining that blockchain has already seen success in helping track food supply chains.

He explained:

“In 2017, Walmart and IBM decided to trial a blockchain to track mangos from source to store … at the end of the trial, we proved we could cut down the time to trace food from seven days to 2.2 seconds. That’s food traceability at the speed of thought.”

Security concerns

While committee members seemed enthused on the idea of private-sector blockchains helping businesses solve problems, they shared concerns about using similar platforms to share government-related information. Representatives Clay Higgins (R-LA) and Ed Perlmutter (D-CO) in particular asked for clarification on how distributed ledgers would be secured from potential attackers.

Charles Romine, director of the Information Technology Lab at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), noted that 51 percent attacks and compromised computers could both disrupt a blockchain, but that these types of attacks would be less dangerous for large – and therefore powerful – networks.

One particular area that was honed in on is quantum computing, which some have warned could undermine the security of blockchain systems.

These concerns are being considered but are at least 15 to 30 years away from becoming a reality, Romine explained.

“If there is a concerted effort to develop quantum computing, I believe we have a number of years before it reaches maturity – what we refer to as being cryptographically relevant.”

Looking ahead

As with any hearing before Congress, the natural question becomes: what comes next?

Prior to the hearing, aides to the committee downplayed the prospects of immediate action, though they floated the idea that the testimony on Wednesday could form the basis of work toward some kind of legislation around blockchain.

IBM’s Jerry Cuomo prepared a list of potential actions Congress could take in order to provide more support for blockchain research. First and foremost, he recommended that the government should encourage projects which can directly impact the U.S.

Cuomo argued in favor of a “thoughtful” approach to legislation.

“Perhaps most importantly, [Congress should] recognize the difference between blockchain’s use in new forms of currency from broader uses of blockchain when considering regulatory policy. Carefully evaluate policies established regarding cryptocurrencies to ensure that there will not be unintended consequences that stymie the innovation and development surrounding blockchain.”

Ultimately, it’s tough to say whether Congress will move on such legislation anytime soon – especially considering the current political climate in the U.S. today – but the process likely moved one step closer through today’s testimony.

Panel image via YouTube

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/dc-blockchain-hearing-sees-call-for-congressional-commission/

#Blockchain explained: It builds trust when you need it most $SX $SX.ca $SXOOF $IDK.ca $AAO.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:01 PM on Monday, February 12th, 2018
  • Blockchain is best known as the technology behind the cryptocurrency bitcoin — a digital currency whose value soared above $19,000 over the last year before slumping to half that when the frenzy subsided
  • But blockchain is so much more, potentially easing the doubts and uncertainties that dog so much of life — whether buying a used car from a stranger, having faith that a piece of fruit really is organic, or knowing that a prescription drug isn’t counterfeit
  • Blockchain, in effect, hard-wires trust into transactions or data that we might otherwise be more cautious about

Here’s everything you need to know about the technology powering the bitcoin cryptocurrency today and, soon, a myriad of services that will change your life.

This is part of “Blockchain Decoded,” a series looking at the impact of blockchain, bitcoin and cryptocurrency on our lives.

These days, we’re having a harder and harder time trusting each other.

Trust is an essential part of ordinary living, whether it’s picking mechanics based on Yelp reviews, sliding credit cards into gas station fuel pumps or heeding our doctor’s advice. But our trust has been eroding for years. In the US, only 33 percent of us felt we could trust our government in 2017 — a decline of 14 percentage points from 2016, according to Edelman’s annual trust barometer study. Trust in businesses dropped from 58 percent to 48 percent, too, while media (fake news!) and social networks also took a hit.

That’s a problem. The less trust you have, the harder everything becomes. Did that job candidate really graduate from college? Did your brother-in-law really repay that loan?

But there’s an unlikely solution that might help restore enough faith in strangers to make our lives a bit easier: an encryption technology called blockchain.

Blockchain is best known as the technology behind the cryptocurrency bitcoin — a digital currency whose value soared above $19,000 over the last year before slumping to half that when the frenzy subsided. But blockchain is so much more, potentially easing the doubts and uncertainties that dog so much of life — whether buying a used car from a stranger, having faith that a piece of fruit really is organic, or knowing that a prescription drug isn’t counterfeit. Blockchain, in effect, hard-wires trust into transactions or data that we might otherwise be more cautious about.

“It’s revolutionary,” said Mark Siegel, an investor at Menlo Ventures.

Bitcoin’s value has soared and plunged over the last year, and it’s hard to separate the sensible from the scams among the 1,500 other cryptocurrencies. But blockchain has enjoyed more stable appeal.

Indeed, staid companies like IBM, Microsoft and Intel are offering blockchain as just another software tool to get business done. Other companies dabbling in blockchain include Goldman Sachs, Nasdaq, Walmart and Visa.

Because blockchains work as a secure digital ledger, a bumper crop of startups are hoping to bring it to voting, lotteries, ID cards and identity verification, graphics rendering, welfare payments, job hunting and insurance payments.

A lot of that revolution could be invisible to you, taking place inside and among businesses. But it’s potentially a very big deal. Analyst firm Gartner estimates that blockchain will provide $176 billion in value to businesses by 2025 and a whopping $3.1 trillion by 2030.

How does blockchain actually work?

OK, strap yourself in, because this gets a bit hairy.

A good place to start is the name: a blockchain is an ever-growing set of data blocks. Each block records a collection of transactions — for example, that you now hold the title to the car you bought or that you paid a car dealer to get it.

IBM and Maersk have a partnership to use blockchain to smooth shipping operations. A single blockchain can help exporters, shipping companies, port authorities and importers cooperate.

Maersk

That may sound simple, but here’s a difference between blockchain and the Department of Motor Vehicles. Today, the government stores the information on its own central computer. Blockchains, though, distribute it across a group of computers — maybe even thousands of them. Each has its own copy of the blockchain transactions.

That decentralization and synchronization means no single party controls the data. If one business sells an asset to another, each sees the same data. There’s no need for lawyers at one company to call the other if their accounting databases disagree, because there’s only one accounting database.

Cryptography — mathematical methods of keeping data secret and proving identity — now enters the picture when it comes to recording transactions. Blockchain uses the same cryptographic key technology that keeps hackers from sniffing your credit card number when you type it into an e-commerce website. One digital key ensures only you can enter a transaction to the blockchain involving your assets, and another digital key lets someone else confirm it really was you who added the transaction.

“You can take a network of parties that didn’t have prior experience working with each other — that didn’t have reason for trust — and still find a way to build a transaction record or a history of the truth,” said Brian Behlendorf, executive director for the Linux Foundation’s Hyperledger project for blockchain software.

Indelible ink

Another fundamental part of the blockchain is called immutability — its resistance to tampering or other changes. To understand it, you need to understand another cryptographic concept called the hash.

Hashing reduces data to a bunch of seemingly random characters — for example, the hash of the phrase “the quick brown fox” is “9ECB36561341D18EB65484E833EFEA61EDC74B84CF5E6AE1B81C63533E25FC8F” using an encoding method called SHA-256. Tweaking just one letter in the phrase produces a completely different hash, and you can’t go backward to figure out the original data from the hash.

With blockchain, hashes are linked together so any minute change is immediately visible, not just for the block housing it but for all other blocks added later. With red flags that big for changes that small, you can see why auditors would get excited.

“It’s like doing the crossword puzzle in ink instead of pencil,” said Marie Wieck, head of IBM’s 1,500-employee blockchain group. “You will see if you change your answer to 3 across from moon to star.”

That’s no fun for embezzlers accustomed to hiding behind dodgy or altered records. Cryptocurrencies can offer anonymity to criminals, which is why it’s been popular for things like the WannaCry ransomware that locked up people’s computers until they paid up. But blockchain makes it easier to find the digital scene of the crime — especially with private blockchains that networks of business partners can set up to cooperate.

Mining madness

The process for locking down a block onto the blockchain so it can’t be changed, at least today, is called mining.

And it’s a problem.

Here’s how it works. When you and others announce transactions to a blockchain network, computers on that network race to solve a complicated mathematical puzzle based on those transactions. A computer that succeeds announces it to the network, and the transaction is accepted if other computers verify that none of the assets in question were already used. That’s what’ll keep you from selling the same concert ticket twice on a blockchain-based ticket market. (Citizen Ticket and Active Ticketing are working on this.)

Cryptocurrency mining computers like this Antminer S9 from Bitmain may look modest, but when stacked by the thousands there’s immense horsepower to make today’s blockchains work.

Bitmain

But today’s mining approach, called “proof of work,” has huge drawbacks.

For one thing, mining works most profitably on powerful computers that consume immense amounts of electrical power. For example, bitcoin mining today uses about as much power as the country of Singapore, enough to power 4.4 million houses, according to cryptocurrency analyst firm Digiconomist. That amount is growing.

For another, transactions are relatively slow. Blockchain transactions can race past transactions that rely on middlemen and reconciliation procedures, like escrow accounts for home purchases or international money transfers. But bitcoin transactions can take about 10 minutes, which is why cryptocurrencies today aren’t useful for just buying something in a store.

There’s lots of work to free blockchain from the problems of transaction speed and energy consumption, though. One idea, “proof of stake,” uses no significant computing power and looks to be the future for the Ethereum Project, which is responsible for the ether cryptocurrency.

If bitcoin was the first generation of blockchain and Ethereum the second, there are a number of people hoping their project will catch on as the third.

Tezos, for example, hopes to build in better governance so its technology can move forward without the troubles bitcoin and Ethereum have suffered, said Tezos CEO Kathleen Breitman, speaking at the Techonomy conference in November — though ironically, Tezos has suffered governance problems of its own with a spat over its own management. Another challenger is Dfinity. Its chief scientist, Dominic Williams, promises transaction speeds 600 times faster than Ethereum, which today is only a bit faster than bitcoin.

Smart contracts

The original blockchain was described in a 2008 bitcoin paper by Satashi Nakamoto, a pseudonym for a person or perhaps group that unified some ideas into the first working cryptocurrency. The idea became reality with the release of open-source bitcoin software in 2009. The bitcoin blockchain now records about 300 million transactions and counting.

But ether has popularized a newer idea called smart contracts. These are programs that run on the Ethereum network and take automated if-this-then-that actions. For example, a smart contract could look for the highest bid in an auction at a certain time and automatically transfer ownership rights to the auction winner.

Bitcoin is based on blockchain technology. The surging price helped generate new interest that’s withstood the recent plunge in bitcoin value.

Yahoo Finance

“When companies sign a contract, it’s enforced by a judge or lawyers in a court,” said Vipul Goyal, an associate professor in Carnegie Mellon University’s cryptography group. “Smart contracts are enforced by cryptographic mechanisms in the code. Enforcing the contract is much cheaper and much faster — almost instant.”

With smart contracts, blockchain could help automate lots of computing operations, including ones humans never touch. Your electric car could wait for favorable electricity prices before deciding when to charge itself from the grid, solar panels or in-home batteries, then the blockchain could handle accounting among all the parties.

Goyal expects blockchain will help automate all sorts of transactions. For example, if it’s used to register your car purchase, that could trigger a cascade of other operations, like transferring the car’s cryptographic keys that let its owner unlock the car.

“This is much more efficient than going to the DMV and filling out paperwork,” he said. “It’s also more secure, because these keys cannot be forged. The seller can’t make copies of the key and try to steal the car.”

The ties that bind

Expect to see blockchain showing up in particular where there are groups of interlinked organizations. That could include one company and its suppliers, or it could be consortiums of competitors and and their suppliers.

For example, IBM has a blockchain partnership with a long list of food suppliers and grocery retailers, including Dole, Kroger, Nestlé, Tyson Foods and Walmart.

The basic attention token, developed by browser maker Brave Software, uses blockchain to oversee online ad payments that can flow among advertisers, publishers and anyone using its browser.

Brave Software

Another blockchain project comes through browser startup Brave, which relies on the technology to change online advertising in a way that improves performance and privacy while giving browser users a cut of the proceeds. Blockchain accounting, using a digital payment mechanism called the basic attention token (BAT), enables direct payments among advertisers, publishers and browser users — for example an advertiser paying a publisher or a reader making a small one-off payment for a news article without buying a subscription.

It’s transparent, so anyone can see exactly how many BATs were transferred and check that Brave didn’t illicitly siphon any off, Brave CEO Brendan Eich said.

But for companies averse to sharing data with competitors, blockchain’s transparency is a difficulty. There are mechanisms for handling the challenge, Behlendorf said.

“In most networks, you have a balance between data that can be kept private, but enough public that you can attest to its veracity,” Behlendorf said.

Another way blockchain could bring many parties together is property records.

There are thousands of counties in the US, each with its own record of who owns what. One startup, Propy, hopes to digitize those records, mirroring the records initially the way title companies do, but also storing them on the blockchain, said CEO Natalia Karayaneva.

If county clerks saw the benefit, they could gradually move to the system — it’s decentralized, not Propy’s own database. Propy hopes to profit by taking a percentage of the sales it facilitates, but at the same time, it also hopes to cut purchasers’ costs — for example by eliminating the thousands of dollars that title insurance can cost.

Slow down there a minute

For something as hyped as blockchain, with millions of dollars raised, you have to expect some backlash. There’s plenty, starting with the criticism that blockchain would have already taken off if it’s so great and concerns that it’s abetting cryptocurrency shenanigans. There’s also the concern that poorly written code could leave a faulty foundation.

Overinflated expectations are nothing new to the tech industry, though, and there are enough serious players engaged that it’s hard to dismiss blockchain as all sizzle and no steak. Expect a winnowing as reality sets in.

“In 2018, we expect to see a number of projects stopped that should never have been started in the first place,” said Forrester analyst Martha Bennett.

She points out plenty of other areas where blockchain falls short of its promises. The immutability comes at a cost, lacking some of the mechanisms for recourse found in today’s slower processes. Companies cooperating to set up their own private blockchains, rather than using public ones like Ethereum, must have some trust already to set up rules for access and governance.

Here’s another hitch: getting everybody on board. For example, Automaker Renault hopes for a blockchain to lock down car maintenance records. After all, who wouldn’t want to know if the used car you’re thinking of buying made lots of trips to the repair shop? It turns out the seller may not share your enthusiasm for that much transparency.

So it’s not perfect. But it doesn’t have to be. Blockchain just has to be better than what we have today. There are a lot of underhanded cryptocurrency dealings, but regulators are now reining in abuses, said Rick Levin, chairman of the financial technology and regulation team at the AmLaw law firm Polsinelli. Likewise, engineers are hammering out improvements to blockchain and big names like Nasdaq and Goldman Sachs are embracing it.

“I don’t think it’s just going to vanish,” Levin said. “There’s too much energy behind this.”

Source: https://www.cnet.com/news/blockchain-explained-builds-trust-when-you-need-it-most/

St-Georges Eco-Mining $SX.ca $SXOOF Announces Amendment to the Letter of Intent Between its Subsidiary #ZeU Crypto Networks Inc. and Tiande $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 8:17 AM on Thursday, February 8th, 2018

  • Letter of intent dated January 12, 2018 relating to an asset acquisition between SX’s subsidiary, ZeU CLrypto Networks Inc. and Qingdao Tiande Blockchain Information Technology Co. Ltd. has been amended
  • Proposed acquisition is subject to a number of terms and conditions, including but not limited to, the completion of a concurrent financing not less than $10,000,000 and up to $30,000,000 that can be done in tranches and the receipt of all necessary regulatory, corporate and third party approvals

Montreal, February 8, 2018 / St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp. (CSE: SX) (OTC: SXOOF) (FSE: 85G1) announced today that its previously announced letter of intent dated January 12, 2018 relating to an asset acquisition between SX’s subsidiary, ZeU Crypto Networks Inc. and Qingdao Tiande Blockchain Information Technology Co. Ltd. has been amended. The general terms of the LOI, which referred to Qingdao Tiande Technologies Limited instead of Qingdao, were previously announced by press release dated January 14, 2018.

ZeU, Qingdao and Beijing Tiande Technologies Inc. (“Beijing” and collectively with Qingdao, “Tiande”) entered into the amendment to the LOI (the “Amendment”), which has extended the date by which the parties will conclude the execution of a definitive agreement on or around February 19, 2018 or such later date as may be mutually agreed upon by the parties. The proposed acquisition is subject to a number of terms and conditions, including but not limited to, the completion of a concurrent financing not less than $10,000,000 and up to $30,000,000 that can be done in tranches and the receipt of all necessary regulatory, corporate and third party approvals.

The Amendment also revised the consideration structure, such that the proposed Acquisition will now be settled through the issuance of 75,000,000 common shares of ZeU (each a “Share”) and 75,000,000 Share purchase warrants (each a “Warrant”) on Closing and an additional 75,000,000 Shares after the issuance of the 20th patent derived from the intellectual property and patent application acquired from Tiande. Each Warrant will be exercisable at a price of CND$1.00 for a period of three (3) years following the date ZeU completes a transaction pursuant to which its Shares will either be listed on a recognized stock exchange in North America, or will be exchanged for common shares of a reporting issuer listed on a recognized stock exchange in North America.

Frank Dumas, President & CEO of St-Georges and of ZeU Crypto Networks commented: “The Acquisition required an extensive due diligence effort and has its own particular challenges. We are happy with the current progress and we can now see the finish line ahead of us. Some elements that are ‘sensitive’ to third party sovereign entities increased the expected workload. The current proposal should allow Tiande to operate in China as an exclusive partner to ZeU, giving ZeU the exclusive ownership and right to develop and commercialize the technologies outside of China and would also call for the establishment of a “Canadian Intellectual Property (IP) Container” and a “Chinese Intellectual Property (IP) Container” allowing for a “Chinese Source Code” to be exclusively used in China without any possibility for North American oversight. In order to facilitate the due diligence requirement, Tiande is giving access to its Sandbox installation to third parties interested in running live tests with the ZeU protocol. Institutions that are considering subscribing to the current financing effort are welcome to use the Sandbox platform.”

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.

Compliance and medias contact: 514.295.9878

5 #Blockchain Opportunities No Company Can Afford To Miss $SX $SX.ca $IDK.ca $AAO.ca #Blockstation

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:56 PM on Wednesday, February 7th, 2018
  • blockchain phenomenon appears to be gathering pace as we head into 2018
  • With big announcements from the likes of Kodak and Microsoft, it’s clear that there are opportunities beyond finance where it has already taken a foothold

Bernard Marr , Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.

The blockchain phenomenon appears to be gathering pace as we head into 2018. With big announcements from the likes of Kodak and Microsoft, it’s clear that there are opportunities beyond finance where it has already taken a foothold.

But what are the opportunities for your business? To help start to answer that question I have come up with five areas of activity where a move to distributed, encrypted record keeping could provide a competitive edge.

Reducing costs

Banks and other financial institutions such as insurers have already moved to investigate and adopt blockchain technology. Of course for them it may be a case of survival as the concept is so disruptive to their traditional business model, the danger is that if they don’t act, someone else will.

Banks and credit card companies charge around $2 trillion a year for providing middle-man services such as clearing payments and fraud-checking. Moving to blockchain systems can effectively automate much of this, bringing down costs.

But the characteristics of blockchain which make it so transformative in finance – the transparency, reduced need for trust, and robust, immutable structure of data – can help reduce financial burdens involved with making and recording transactions in many other industries, too.

If centralized, unwieldy and unsecure ledgering and inventory systems can be replaced with a streamlined, distributed blockchain system for record keeping, then there will be reduced need for middle-man functions such as administration and compliance-checking of those records.

Storing data on a blockchain also means it is more reliable. If this data is then being used in your business analytics (e.g. machine data) it is more likely to be accurate and yield insights which will align with real-world objectives.

Increasing traceability

In the food industry there is a huge demand for provenance. Demonstrating that safety and welfare standards have been met at every point of the supply chain is hugely important, for legal and business reasons.

Blockchain has been given rise to the potential of every individual ingredient or product effectively receiving its own “digital passport”, meaning its origin and journey can be traced at any stage of the process.

Traditionally these records will have been kept by a number of different organizations – from growers to pickers, packagers, retailers and deliverer – in a centralized fashion. This leaves multiple points of potential failure, such as data loss, and possibly invites fraudulent activity.

Blockchain has also been enthusiastically adopted by the diamond industry – where provenance is also paramount. UK-based Everledger has recorded details of more than 1.6 million of them on a blockchain, storing data such as their size, color and certificate number. High resolution imagery is used which means diamonds can still be matched to their “digital twins” on the blockchain, even if the unique identifying numbers which are invisibly etched into the stones are removed. It plans to begin doing the same with vintage wine in the near future.

Improving customer experience

Loyalty and reward programs encourage repeat custom and also give access to invaluable insights into buying habits and trends. Traditionally the data from these programs is collated centrally rewards are issued in arrears, after administration and processing.

Moving to a blockchain based system enables reward points to be calculated and issued at the point they are earned. This not only speeds things up, it potentially lets customers use the value in their purchases to receive immediate discounts.

Several startups, such as Qiibee and Loyall, have brought blockchain-based loyalty cards to the market, with the idea that it will make it easier for customers to transfer and trade the value in their freebie vouchers across different retailers.  This could lead to reward and loyalty exchanges, where customers can choose to invest their earned value in what they need right now, rather than what they have previously spent money on. Overall this will lead to happier and more satisfied customers.

READ ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE:  https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2018/02/07/5-blockchain-opportunities-no-company-can-afford-to-miss/#178c47b71a83

Startup Raises $20 Million to Build ‘#YouTube on the #Blockchain’ $SX $SX.ca $IDK.ca #AAO.ca #Blockstation

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:12 AM on Tuesday, February 6th, 2018
  • Silicon Valley startup Lino is preparing to take on YouTube with a decentralized, collectively-owned video content distribution system
  • Purports to cut out the middleman to more fairly compensate content creators
Feb 6, 2018 at 02:00 UTC

NEWS

Silicon Valley startup Lino is preparing to take on YouTube with a decentralized, collectively-owned video content distribution system that purports to cut out the middleman to more fairly compensate content creators.

The company, which faces competition from Streamspace, Flixxo, Viuly and Stream, all of which are developing similar concepts, received a $20 million vote of confidence from prominent Chinese seed investor Zhenfund during a private token sale, it announced today.

Explaining the company’s mission, its website says that YouTube holds “enormous power” over creators and focuses on maximizing profit, which can bring it into conflict with its actual creators.

The site continues:

“The solution is to create a collectively owned, decentralized means of distribution, which ensures all content value is directly distributed to content creators and affiliated contributors without going through a privately owned entity as a middleman.”

The company’s LINO tokens will operate as the system’s currency and will be earned by creating and sharing content, as well as from the development of infrastructure and applications on top of the Lino blockchain. In other words, users who run nodes to host content will earn tokens, as will the content creators, according to a Medium post by the group.

“We believe in decentralized, peer-to-peer [content delivery networks (CDN)], but current projects seem not ready for stability and costs,” Lino’s website states.

Instead, it seeks to provide a decentralized CDN through an auction system, which the founders believe will maintain a high standard of work on the platform, according to TechCrunch.

The value of the content will be determined by human engagement with it, which Lino argues will prevent fraud and bots from manipulating the system. Transactions will be free of charge. The “auction system” is a reflection of that engagement – users with more interesting or novel content will receive more of a reward than those who produce less interesting content.

Lino chief executive Wilson Wei told TechCrunch that he expected content creators to garner three to five times the profits they make on YouTube or its competitor site, Twitch.

While the outcome of Lino’s project remains to be seen – the product will launch later this year – Wei expressed confidence in its underlying design. He told TechCrunch:

“The whole content economy is huge, but we believe in the decentralized organization concept. Why don’t we do it and starting the whole revolution starting with video content?”

Image via Shutterstock

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/lino-raises-20-million-youtube-fight/