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ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Blockchain Goes To Work At #Walmart $WMT, $IBM, #Amazon $AMZN JPMorgan, Cargill and 45 Other Enterprises $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:23 AM on Wednesday, April 17th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Blockchain Goes To Work At Walmart, IBM, Amazon, JPMorgan, Cargill and 45 Other Enterprises




Michael del Castillo Forbes Staff

On the Jersey side of the Hudson River just across from Manhattan’s Financial District, there is a glass-and-steel office tower designed in a severe International Style aesthetic. “DTCC” is emblazoned across the top, but few outside of Wall Street realize that in this building, occupied by the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp., are records for most of the world’s securities, representing some $48 trillion in assets—from stocks and bonds to mutual funds and derivatives. In the 1970s, Wall Street created a DTCC predecessor to replace a system that had been powered by young men running around the cavernous alleys of lower Manhattan delivering stock certificates from brokerage house to brokerage house.

DTCC still has paper certificates in its vaults, but records ­related to the 90 million daily transactions it handles are kept electronically on its servers and backed up in various locations. Thousands of financial institutions and exchanges in 130 countries rely on DTCC for custody, clearing, settlement and other clerical ­services. 

In a few months DTCC will begin the largest live implementation of blockchain, the distributed database technology made popular by the bitcoin cryptocurrency. Records for about 50,000 accounts in DTCC’s Trade Information Warehouse, where information on $10 trillion worth of credit derivatives is stored, will move to a customized digital ledger called AxCore. 

According to Rob Palatnick, DTCC’s chief technology architect, the warehouse already keeps an electronic “golden record” of events such as maturity dates, payment calculations and other activities needed to clear and settle these securities daily. But each participant in a complicated credit derivatives transaction also keeps its own records, which must in turn be reconciled multiple times before the investment matures. By moving those records to the blockchain, visible to all participants in real time, most of those redundancies won’t be necessary.

“We’re not talking about eliminating humans and firms,” Pa­l­atnick says. “We’re talking about getting rid of layers of databases and translations between those databases.”

On the other side of the world, in Taipei, Taiwan, Foxconn, the electronics giant best known as a manufacturer of iPhones, launched a Shanghai startup called Chained Finance with a Chinese peer-to-peer lender. Chained will soon connect Foxconn and its many small suppliers (and their suppliers’ suppliers) on an Ethereum-based blockchain that will use its own token and smart contracts (read: automatically executed) to make payments and provide financing in near real time, eliminating a daisy chain of paperwork. 

“We view blockchain as the skeleton of our work,” says Jack Lee, the founder of Foxconn’s venture capital arm, which has invested $40 million in six blockchain startups. “Smart contracts that automatically execute transactions are the muscles, and tokens are the blood.”

Welcome to the brave new world of enterprise blockchain, where corporations are embracing the technology underlying cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and using it to speed up business processes, increase transparency and potentially save billions of dollars. At its core, blockchain is simply a distributed database, with an identical copy stored on many computers. That facilitates transactions (financial or otherwise) between individuals (or companies) that don’t know or trust each other. It’s virtually impossible to cheat, since every transaction is recorded in many ­places and the details of those transactions are visible to everyone. Companies are already using blockchain to track fresh-caught tuna from fishing hooks in the South Pacific to grocery shelves, to speed up insurance claims and to manage medical records. Total corporate and government spending on blockchain should hit $2.9 billion in 2019, an increase of 89% over the previous year, and reach $12.4 billion by 2022, according to the International Data Corp. When PwC surveyed 600 “blockchain-savvy” execs last year, 84% said their companies are involved with blockchain.

To chronicle the rise of so called “enterprise” blockchain,  Forbes has created its first annual Blockchain 50 list of big companies that are putting the technology to work in ­meaningful ways. While blockchain’s first application, cryptocurrency, is struggling to achieve mainstream adoption, these companies are committing manpower and capital to build the future on top of shared databases.

The version of a blockchain future these companies are building is, for the most part, far different from what the founders and early adopters of blockchain had envisioned. While many crypto­currency idealists fantasize about a global, public network of individuals connected directly and democratically, without middle­men, these companies—many of which are middlemen themselves like DTCC—are building private networks they will use to profit from centralized management. 

Not surprisingly, financial firms—from Allianz to Visa and JPMorgan Chase—dominate the list. But Blockchain 50 companies run the gamut of industries, including energy firm BP, retailer Walmart and media company Comcast. 

Because of the lingering bad taste left by bitcoin drug bazaars like Silk Road and the 2017 digital currency bubble, most companies emphasize the distinction between crypto and blockchain, shunning the former and embracing the latter. In some ways the members of the Blockchain 50 represent a bridge between the old and new worlds. Just as internal computer networks were adopted by companies long before the internet took off, these firms are starting by adopting distributed ledger technology at a small scale.

“The era of blockchain tourism has ended,” says Bridget van Kralingen, Senior Vice President for Platforms & Blockchain. “We’ve really seen blockchain move from being overshadowed by cryptocurrency to focus on real business problems and complex processes.”

In 2009, when Satoshi Nakamoto, bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator, activated his network, its blockchain was the underlying accounting system that let anyone with bitcoin transfer money without the need of a middleman. Transactions are processed in blocks—just a fancy word for a hunk of data—about every ten minutes, each containing a compressed version of the previous block, linking them together into a chain. Instead of relying on a bank or another middleman to keep track of when a bitcoin leaves one location and arrives at another, the thousands of computers on the bitcoin network do the work and in exchange for their efforts are paid in bitcoin. 

For most companies this presented a potential problem. While identities aren’t required to use the bitcoin blockchain, the transactions themselves are tied to addresses that are publicly available, meaning that with a bit of work many of these addresses can be tied to actual people or companies. Thus enterprises like Coca-Cola and JPMorgan Chase, accustomed to maintaining competitive advantages based on proprietary processes and control, were initially skeptical of cryptocurrency.

Businesses also need some control over their data. “The entire corporate world has been fashioned around who has responsibility over a particular part of the business flow,” says David Treat, the global head of Accenture’s Financial Services Blockchain practice. “There can be no gaps, because that is unacceptable for a multibillion-dollar company. You cannot have a gap, or you are subject to huge security breaches and social contract breaches.”

Perhaps no firm has had a greater influence on the growing corporate use of blockchain technology than Digital Asset Holdings, a New York-based startup that hired the former JPMorgan Chase banker Blythe Masters as its CEO in early 2015. Under Masters, Digital Asset began making acquisitions and almost immediately purchased a small company that was in the process of building an “invitation only,” or permissioned, blockchain. Then in late 2015 Digital Asset donated the code for its “open ledger” project to the Linux Foundation, which supports commercial open-source software projects, including the Linux operating system.

The project was called Hyperledger, and thanks in part to ­Masters’ connections, its backers read like a who’s who of finance and technology. Thirty companies are listed as founders, including ABN AMRO, Accenture, Cisco, CME Group, IBM, Intel, JPMor­gan Chase, NEC, State Street, VMware and Wells Fargo. Hyper­ledger immediately established itself as the gold standard for corporate blockchain projects.

What happened next might be considered the Big Bang moment of enterprise blockchain. In early 2016, IBM donated 44,000 lines of code to the project, which formed the core of a new blockchain with faster speeds and increased privacy. No fewer than half of the members of the Forbes Blockchain 50 are now using that blockchain, known as Hyperledger Fabric.

“We’ve been very focused on making sure that not only is the blockchain technology standard but that the documents and data are standard,” says Marie Wieck, IBM Blockchain’s general manager. “This standardization allows [the companies] to not spend their time comparing differences and validity in the documents.”

Shortly after the launch of Hyperledger, which is a nonprofit venture, a New York fintech called R3 raised $107 million from the likes of ING, Barclays and UBS to create a for-profit enterprise blockchain platform called Corda Enterprise.

As the commercial potential of co-opting blockchain technology became more apparent, many cryptocurrency startups began to rethink their models.

For example, San Francisco’s Ripple, originally called OpenCoin and conceived of as yet another alternative monetary system, expanded its focus in late 2015 from the cryptocurrency (called ripple and trading as XRP) to building software for large banks. A bitcoin startup called Counterparty spawned another company, Symbiont, in March 2015, which coded a proprietary blockchain that’s now being used by Vanguard for sharing stock index data. In February 2017, ConsenSys, a Brooklyn-based collection of crypto companies controlled by one of Ethereum’s founders, helped launch the Enterprise Ethereum Alliance. 

Just as corporate America co-opted counterculture vibes for its marketing and advertising (“Think Different,” “Don’t Be Evil”), its most forward-thinking businesses are fast incorporating a technology that was designed in large part to eliminate them.

In insurance, for example, MetLife’s mobile app Vitana bundles insurance with a test for gestational diabetes that uses a blockchain to record data and verify and pay claims. In recent testing in Singapore, where one in five expectant mothers develops gestational diabetes, a practitioner simply enters a positive test result into a patient’s electronic medical record and in a matter of seconds MetLife’s smart contract deposits an insurance payment into that patient’s bank account to cover the medical expenses associated with the condition. No paperwork or claim filing necessary.

Similarly, Germany’s Allianz, working with EY, tested moving certain captive insurance claims processes—often involving many emails, attachments and phone calls across multiple times zones—to a private blockchain. The time required to process a claim fell from weeks to hours.

The French bank BNP Paribas, which has lent money to commodities traders since the 19th century, is considering using a ledger platform called Voltron to process letters of credit for traders. Northern Trust has begun administering private equity funds using Hyperledger Fabric. Broadridge Financial has been running pilots testing multiple distributed ledgers for its dominant proxy voting and shareholder communications business.

“In real time, you know who owns the stock, who’s entitled to vote and how it’s tied to the universally-agreed-upon shareholder meeting agenda,” says Michael Tae, Broadridge’s head of strategy.

In the perpetually fraught food business, which regularly endures disasters ranging from E. coli outbreaks to a worker being cooked alive, companies like Nestlé and Bumble Bee Foods are turning to blockchain to secure their supply chains and reduce paperwork.

Golden State Foods, a big McDonald’s supplier that makes more than 400,000 hamburgers per hour, tracks the location and temperature of its patties with devices like radio-frequency ID tags and Hyperledger Fabric. The system can immediately alert GSF to conditions that might lead to spoilage. At the same time, it can optimize inventory levels by tracking how much meat is in a truck or in a restaurant’s freezer, in real time. 

At this year’s SXSW conference in Austin, Texas, Bumble Bee unveiled an SAP-built supply-chain blockchain offering complete transparency to its customers. Soon you will no longer have to take Bumble Bee’s word for it when its assures you that the 12-ounce package of yellowfin tuna you just bought was caught by individual fishermen in the South Pacific and not by a factory ship. The fishing crews, tuna processors and packers are now entering their own data in real time on Bumble Bee’s distributed ledger. By summer, Bumble Bee will be sharing that information with retailers and customers who take the time to check. 

From a public relations standpoint alone, Bumble Bee’s SAP blockchain is likely to bear dividends. In 2017 Greenpeace ranked Bumble Bee 17th out of 20 tuna brands for its sustainability practices, accusing it of “greenwashing” a host of bad behaviors with environmentally friendly marketing.

“Food safety and sustainably sourced product has become an overwhelmingly important topic in our industry,” says Tony Costa, the CIO at Bumble Bee. “Leveraging the latest technology enables us to open it up to more of a public perspective, if you will. So we get out of the business of managing data. We’re relying on a relationship.”

In the healthcare business, an estimated 20 cents of every ­dollar—some $700 billion a year—is wasted because of inefficiencies. Ciox, a little-known company based in Alpharetta, ­Georgia, that manages medical-records exchanges for 60% of the ­hospitals in the U.S., is considering developing a private blockchain that healthcare providers could use—for a fee paid to Ciox—to exchange data. Blockchain 50 enterprises like Ciox and the media giant Comcast, which is toying with using blockchain to micro-target television advertisements, plan to use the privacy features of blockchain to profit from their customers’ data while protecting their identities. 

Despite the surge in corporations working on blockchain projects, the technology is still new, and relatively few have generated significant revenues or savings. 

The one group that is getting rich from the current enterprise blockchain gold rush: consultants. Deloitte, PwC, KPMG, EY and Tata Consultancy Services are deploying small armies to preach the virtues of blockchain to the C-suite and charging huge fees to help companies implement the technology. (We excluded consultants from the Blockchain 50 because they played a key role in helping us ­create the list.) Deloitte, for example, has 1,400 full-time blockchain employees. India’s Tata has 1,000 staffers, 600 of them full-time, in its blockchain unit. Tech firms, including Oracle, SAP and Amazon, are also staking out their turf.

Part technology firm, part consultant, IBM may be the biggest and most successful enterprise blockchain company of all. Besides helping create Hyperledger Fabric, the company has 1,500 staffers—mostly engineers—devoted to the new technology and reports that its IBM Blockchain powers 500 client projects.

IBM Food Trust, for example, counts Walmart, Kroger, Nestlé and ­Carrefour, the French grocer, among its 50-plus members. IBM is also behind TrustChain, a consortium of companies in the supply chain for diamonds and ­jewelry, including Rio Tinto Diamonds, Asahi Refining and Helz­berg Diamonds. Health Utility Network, another Big Blue group, counts three of the five largest U.S. health insurers—Aetna, Cigna and Anthem—as members.

 â€œThe power of any blockchain network is in its participants and its members,” says IBM’s Wieck. It matters little ­whether those members are crypto-idealists or global corporations.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaeldelcastillo/2019/04/16/blockchain-goes-to-work/#1116e4e52a40

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Bithumb’s parent company receives $200 million investment from Japan’s ST #Blockchain Fund $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:23 AM on Monday, April 15th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Bithumb’s parent company receives $200 million investment from Japan’s ST Blockchain Fund

  • Bithumb’s parent company, Blockchain Exchange Alliance [BXA], received a massive $200 million in funding during its Series A round.
  • This huge sum was offered by Japan’s ST Blockchain Fund, reported Coin Telegraph.
  • Though based in Japan, ST Blockchain Fund interests investors from around the world, including Europe and the United States.

BXA is raising funds to take Bithumb to the international level. Bithumb, already one of the largest exchanges in South Korea, will expand in international markets with new trading pairs.

BXA’s press release read,

“The fund shared our vision of creating a global digital exchange platform that can efficiently transfer value across borders with lower costs, which was the key rationale behind this investment decision.”

The news of massive funding comes in after Bithumb lost around $13 million in March following a hack. According to reports, this was considered to be an inside job, done to deceive the company. However, in the third-party public audit, Bithumb reassured investors that their funds were in a secure storage.

Bithumb was also hacked in 2018, losing around $30 million. However, the figure was later corrected to $17 million. The investment by ST will be a much-needed impetus to Bithumb, an exchange that has been reeling under major losses. It has been reported that the South Korean exchange reported losses over $180 million since the price of Bitcoin dropped, while it also had to lay off half of its staff last month.

The timing of the investment also falls in line with the rising prices of cryptocurrencies, especially since Bitcoin has finally breached the $5K mark.

Source: https://ambcrypto.com/bithumbs-parent-company-receives-200-million-investment-from-japans-st-blockchain-fund/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Blockchain Trends 2019 $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:34 AM on Friday, April 12th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Blockchain Trends 2019

  • Blockchain’s evolution over the past few years has been steady and solid.
  • Even so, this groundbreaking technology still has a lot to offer and continues to hold much promise.

By Teodor Stefan, Modex’s Head of Content. Modex helps developers, teams and businesses of all sizes get started on blockchain, providing the full set of tools needed to learn, create, test, deploy and sell smart contracts and DApps.

Continuing from last year’s buzz and the entrance of regulators, blockchain is poised to evolve even further.   A key area is technology for enterprises that require trustless transactions and secure record keeping.
Enterprises can track transactions with greater confidence and security, and blockchain adoption – completely distinct from the cryptocurrency hype or doom – is steadily gaining in enterprise environments.  While some may lament the entry of regulators in 2018, clamping down on ICO projects, and putting in place strict frameworks for compliance, these are signs of a market maturing.

Here’s what we can expect to see in the rest 2019:

Blockchain as a service (BaaS)

While many startups and enterprises are working on their own blockchain solution, it is not always feasible to create, maintain and manage an individual blockchain solution. This is where Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) comes in. Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) is an offering that allows customers to leverage cloud-based solutions to build, host and use their own blockchain apps, smart contracts and functions on the blockchain.  A cloud-based service provider manages all the necessary tasks and activities to keep the infrastructure agile and operational.  We predict Baas will speed up the adoption of blockchain across businesses.

More Security Tokens

In 2018, the utility token market saw a slowdown, so the arrival of security tokens has been one of the hot topics last year. The market has long-waited for the grand entrance of institutional investors, but they have not yet significantly entered the scene. The success of security tokens is contingent on digital asset exchanges being up and running. Alongside crypto exchanges seeking regulatory clearance for security tokens, we also see traditional players like Nasdaq, London Stock Exchange and the Swiss Stock Exchange developing digital asset platforms, signs indicating that market infrastructure will be in place by the second half of this year. As processes stabilize and regulatory concerns are addressed, most likely we will see the launch of several STO projects towards the end of 2019, with major activity in early 2020.

TFT Guide to Security Token Offerings (STOs)

Moving from crypto to digital assets

With several indicators pointing towards the possibility of a global slowdown this year, investors are looking for alternative asset classes. With the developing market for security tokens, there are immense possibilities in the tokenisation of well-performing assets that previously lacked liquidity. Consider healthy Small-Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and Real Estate Assets, that tend to have robust returns, but lack wide market access. While they may not be able to afford public market listing, opening up to global markets of investors could provide an infusion of capital that could help scale their businesses. With over 90% of companies in operation globally listed as SMEs, the potential for growth is significant.

More digital asset services by financial institutions 

This trend started last year and, most likely, will continue in 2019. The user experience of managing your own assets is scary to a lot of people, and there is a strong desire from a business point of view to have custodial services for digital assets. While many businesses are looking for new blockchain use cases, some are embracing cryptocurrency market. Yes, this market has been hit hard last year, with major cryptocurrencies but despite that, people know that cryptocurrency is here to stay, even if they don’t use it themselves in the near future.

Interoperability between blockchains

As the market progresses, there are new blockchain networks showing up, which leads to new chains that offer different speeds, network processing, use-cases. Blockchain interoperability aims to improve information sharing across diverse networks. These cross-chain services improve blockchain interoperability and also make them more practical for day-to-day usage. For instance, with blockchain interoperability, you can send information from EOS to Ethereum blockchain. In 2019, we should see an improvement in the technology that enables blockchain interoperability.

UX Development and scalability

Scalability and performance hurdles affect both enterprise and public adoption. Promising solutions, like sidechains or innovative platforms, are expected to become more sophisticated and adapted this year. Moreover, many blockchain applications now have a mostly complex user interface, which is far from intuitive for the average, non-tech user. In 2019 we expect to see more user-friendly solutions, which are capable of mass adoption both in technology and design.

Convergence between blockchain and the Internet of Things

This topic is quickly picking up steam. IoT adoption is increasing the number of devices and sensors that gather data, and many parties are typically involved in a business transaction based on that data. Blockchain enables safe record-keeping through an immutable ledger, and permits decentralized operations and transactions while preserving trust between all players in the value chain. In 2019, look for the intersection of these two technologies to speed up implementation of both.

More favourable regulations around the world

European countries like SwitzerlandMaltaLithuania, and Lichtenstein will find competition around the world heating up as more and more states will push for additional favorable regulations around blockchain and crypto-ventures. Malaysia, for instance, is planning in Q1 to review its crypto and ICO (Initial Coin Offering) regulations. In addition, governments of various countries will start to explore what blockchain technology can do for them and look for possible use cases.

Stable Coins

Stable Coins could also see a boost in 2019. Cryptocurrencies are the side product of blockchain, but they are volatile. This gives rise and more market traction to Stable Coins. Unlike cryptocurrencies, Stable Coins have stable prices. It is not affected by the market condition and ensures that the stability is maintained all time. Most of the Stable Coins are fiat-backed, but there is still another type of Stable Coins that are backed by commodity, cryptocurrency or belong to the non-collateralized.

Read our coverage on stable coins here

Decentralization of apps, not just of the ledger

2019 should also see more decentralization of apps themselves. Too many applications using a blockchain ledger rely on a centralized application that represents a single point of failure and also a vulnerability that could allow tampering with the data before it gets written to the ledger. The same approach needs to be applied to the application’s logic, which must be decentralized with no single point of control. Each trading partner or member of the ecosystem runs their own app. Building such applications is no easy feat, but it is a required step to ensure wide blockchain adoption for business usage.

Hybrid blockchains

Without doubt, hybrid blockchains should be on your radar in 2019! The hybrid blockchain works by providing the best features and functionality of both public and private blockchain. Hybrid blockchains stand out by offering a customizable solution and also making proper use of what blockchain has to offer – characteristics such as transparency, integrity and security. To name several use-cases of hybrid blockchain: Internet of Things (IoT), banking, supply chain, enterprise services.

Federated blockchains

This year we can also expect to witness a rise in the use of federated blockchain as it gives private blockchain a more customizable outlook. Federated blockchains are similar to private blockchains, but with a simple twist: instead of one organization controlling it, many authorities can control the blockchain and pre-select nodes. The selected group of nodes then ensure that block is validated for processing transactions. Some of the use cases of federated blockchain include insurance claims, financial services, and supply chain management. IBM’s blockchain for food traceability is another good example of federated blockchain.

Source: https://thefintechtimes.com/blockchain-trends-2019/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Blockchain Could Be Used By At Least 50% Of All Companies Within 3 Years, Oracle $ORCL Exec Says $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:00 PM on Tuesday, April 9th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Blockchain Could Be Used By At Least 50% Of All Companies Within 3 Years, Oracle Exec Says

  • “My projection is that between 50%-60% of companies will use blockchain in the next few years,” said Frank Xiong, Oracle group vice president of blockchain product development at the Forbes CIO Summit in Half Moon Bay, California, Monday.

Monica Melton

Ten years after the idea of blockchain was conceived, the technology that underpins cryptocurrencies is starting to be used by large enterprises as a secure way to track goods. But mass utilization is still years away, and it won’t be for every company, said a panel of blockchain executives.

“My projection is that between 50%-60% of companies will use blockchain in the next few years,” said Frank Xiong, Oracle group vice president of blockchain product development at the Forbes CIO Summit in Half Moon Bay, California, Monday.

The enterprise software maker has more than 100 customers using its blockchain platform to track items for reasons such as ensuring the Italian olive oil you’re buying was really made in Italy, or that a manufacturer isn’t buying minerals that support armed conflicts. But it’s not a magic bullet. “We’re past the stage that blockchain can cure everything, so people are becoming more realistic about what’s good for their business model,” he said.

Blockchain is a kind of shared database that allows users to share identical copies of information on many computers. In the past few years, it’s gone from largely supporting virtual currencies like bitcoin to a tool used by companies to more closely and accurately track products or private information that pass through many hands.

Despite the buzz, uptake is still early. Large technology companies like IBM and shipping giant Maersk, and Oracle, have formed consortia around their blockchains, and many efforts are still in the pilot stage. Others, such as $3 billion logistics startup Flexport, say they’re waiting for global standards before they jump in.

In deciding whether to use blockchain, companies should do a pain point assessment, two executives said. Like any venture, they should figure out if it’s worth the cost.

“At the end of the day blockchain makes multipart collaboration more efficient, whether it’s having a consortium to track data on counterfeit getting into supply chains, or how much inventory you need to create a better forecast,” said Ted Kim, vice president in blockchain at Samsung SDS, a unit of the electronics manufacturer that provides IT services, including a pilot projects to track cargo from Korea to Europe using blockchain. He expects in three years, 20% of companies will be using blockchain. “There is tangible ROI in the blockchain.”

Yet even in a world where blockchain is much more widespread, some aspects may resemble today’s commerce system more than blockchain’s evangelists forecast.

“People are predicting that the blockchain will allow people to be decentralized, that everyone will have distributed trusted networks,” said Daniel Jones, CEO of bext360, a software startup that keeps track of commodities by identifying and making an electronic token. “I don’t think that’s possible —I think what we’re going to see is companies vertically integrating, the Amazons of the world are going to continue to vertically integrate to the farm level.”

From left: Laura Mandaro, Forbes Media, Jones, Bext360 Ted Kim, Samsung SDS America Frank Xiong, Oracle, CIO Summit 2019 Forbes Media

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/monicamelton/2019/04/09/blockchain-could-be-used-by-at-least-50-of-all-companies-within-3-years-oracle-exec-says/#4468f55355cf

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – The Game Is On For #Bitcoin, #Ethereum, #Ripple And #Litecoin

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 12:09 PM on Monday, April 8th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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The Game Is On For Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple And Litecoin

  • Over the last seven days, Bitcoin has gained 25.74%, Ethereum 18.76%, Ripple 16.12%, and Litecoin 53.20%
  • Rally was extended across the cryptocurrency markets, with 94 out of the top 100 cryptocurrencies gaining in price

Panos Mourdoukoutas

Investors, traders, and speculators are jumping into the Bitcoin and cryptocurrency markets again, sending prices soaring across the board.

Over the last seven days, Bitcoin has gained 25.74%, Ethereum 18.76%, Ripple 16.12%, and Litecoin 53.20%–see table 1. The rally was extended across the cryptocurrency markets, with 94 out of the top 100 cryptocurrencies gaining in price-see table 2.

Table 1

7d Price Change For Major Cryptocurrencies

Cryptocurrency%7d
Bitcoin25.74
Ethereum18.76
Ripple16.12
Litecoin53.20

Source: Coinmarketcap.com 4/7/19 at 11 a.m.

Table 2

Number of Cryptocurrencies That Advanced/Declined In The Top 100 Ranks

Cryptocurrencies Advance/DeclineNumber
Advance6
Decline94

Source: Coinmarketcap.com 4/7/19 at 11 a.m

The recent Bitcoin rally has left left stocks, bonds, and the yellow metal in the dust, so far, in 2019-see chart.

Bitcoin Beats Stocks, Bonds, and Gold YTD

What could explain the rally?

Several factors. One of them is the renewed interest by big money. “The recent surge in Bitcoin has been sparked by a large buy order – rumored to be around $100 million – that sent BTC straight through technical resistance ($4,235) that had been in place since the start of December 2018,” says Nicholas Cawley from the DailyFX team.”  â€œThe lack of volatility in Bitcoin over the last few weeks has kept prices in-check, and low volume markets are always more susceptible to sharp moves than more liquid markets.”

Kirill Bensonoff, a technology advisor, agrees. “The surge was obviously fueled by a very large order, in the tens of millions of dollars,” says Bensonoff. “This is another sign that institutional players are coming into the market.”

Then there’s the prospect of lower interest rates, which turns risk on again for all sorts of speculative investments.

And there are the “market technicals.” Market volumes are up  3 to 4 times normal turnover, exacerbating the sharp rally,” observes Cawley. “In addition to the clean break of resistance, the move also broke through the 200-day moving average around $4,650 with ease, enabling the rally to continue.”

How far will the rally go? Will Bitcoin ever reach the $20,000 mark again? It all depends on whether regulators will approve financial instruments that allow for broad investor participation in the cryptocurrency markets, like Electronically Trading Funds (ETFs), according to Bensonoff. “For Bitcoin to hit $20,000 in 2019, we would need a major catalyst, and I believe the only one with this much force would be ETF approval,” says Bensonoff. “Without it, we are looking at a $10,000 best case scenario.”

While it’s unclear whether which of the two scenarios will come true, one thing is clear: volatility will continue in the cryptocurrency markets, creating new winners and losers.

[Ed. note: Investing in cryptocoins or tokens is highly speculative and the market is largely unregulated. Anyone considering it should be prepared to lose their entire investment. Disclosure: I don’t own any Bitcoin.]

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/panosmourdoukoutas/2019/04/07/the-game-is-on-for-bitcoin-ethereum-ripple-and-litecoin/#4481885519a6

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Davos Report: Over 40 central banks worldwide are experimenting with #blockchain technology $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:00 PM on Sunday, April 7th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Davos Report: Over 40 central banks worldwide are experimenting with blockchain technology

  • Several central banks are looking into experimenting with cryptocurrencies
  • The degree of blockchain technology research and experimentation varies greatly among central banks, as do the motivations for interest.
  • The central banks use permissioned blockchain network to create their CBDCs

Rajarshi Mitra FXStreet

As per a new report by the World Economic Forum, over 40 central banks around the world are experimenting with blockchain technology. Ashley Lannquist, a project lead in blockchain and distributed ledger technology at the World Economic Forum and the primary author of the report, believes that “It’s very much the case that several central banks are looking at this [experimenting with cryptocurrencies].”

The report states that the degree of this experimentation varies greatly among banks:

“The degree of blockchain technology research and experimentation varies greatly among central banks, as do the motivations for interest. Some central banks are progressive, having begun research and experimentation as early as 2014 and having conducted multiple pilots or even deployments. Another set of institutions is curious and interested in the technology but largely monitors activity by peer institutions and within the private sector, including cryptocurrency investing activity. A final set has not yet dedicated resources to blockchain technology research and may never do so, either because of pressing priorities or the view that DLT at this stage does not promise sufficient upside when considering technological immaturity and risks.”

The report states how these central banks implement their CBDC pilots:

“In many of these CBDC pilots, the central bank issues digital tokens on a distributed ledger that represent, and are redeemable for, central bank reserves in the domestic currency held in a separate account with the central bank. The agents in the system use the CBDC to make interbank transfers that are validated and settled on the distributed ledger.”

The central banks prefer permissioned blockchain networks to create their CBDCs:

“The central banks typically use “permissioned” blockchain network implementations, whereby participants are limited and must be granted access to participate in the network and view the set of transactions. 

The central bank chooses, according to suitability and availability, the type of network and its internal mechanisms (most importantly, the decentralized consensus mechanism the network uses for participants to reach agreement on valid transactions). R3’s Corda, the Linux Foundation’s Hyperledger Fabric, J.P. Morgan’s Quorum, or a simple private configuration of the Ethereum blockchain network are the most popular implementations used by central banks.”

Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/cryptocurrencies/news/davos-report-over-40-central-banks-worldwide-are-experimenting-with-blockchain-technology-201904050249

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – New $50 Million Fund Makes First Investment in #Blockchain ID Startup $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 2:00 PM on Thursday, April 4th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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New $50 Million Fund Makes First Investment in Blockchain ID Startup

  • A new $50 million VC fund has been set up by Nasdaq-listed company Okta to invest in early-stage technology startups, including those working with blockchain
  • Okta, which provides identity management solutions, announced the Okta Ventures Fund Wednesday, adding that it has made its first investment in blockchain-based identity startup Trusted Key

Yogita Khatri

Trusted Key was founded by former Microsoft, Oracle and Symantec executives and offers decentralized digital identity solutions allowing organizations to “work together as ecosystems to share strongly proofed user identities with user consent.”

Through its venture fund, Okta said it will invest in startups that are focused on building innovative solutions around its core businesses using blockchain, artificial intelligence and machine learning.

The San Francisco-based firm’s co-founder and chief operating officer, Frederic Kerrest, said:

“In line with Okta’s vision of enabling any organization to use any technology, Okta Ventures will invest in the growing ecosystem of startups tackling issues like identity, security, and privacy.”

Besides providing investment capital, Okta plans to provide its portfolio companies with additional support, including the use of its software and co-marketing opportunities.

Founded in 2009, Okta has raised total funding of over $229 million, according to Crunchbase. The firm is also backed by notable investors, including Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, Khosla Ventures and others.

Okta went public in the U.S. in April 2017, raising $187 million via an initial public offering (IPO) that saw 11 million shares sold at $17 apiece. The share price of the company has risen sharply since and is currently trading at around $89.

Paper cutouts image via Shutterstock 

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/new-50-million-fund-makes-first-investment-in-blockchain-id-startup

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Blockchain Spending in 2019 to Grow to $2.9 Billion, 88.7% Growth Since 2018 $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:00 AM on Friday, March 29th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Blockchain Spending in 2019 to Grow to $2.9 Billion, 88.7% Growth Since 2018

  • The amount spent on blockchain technology by businesses seeking to utilise the trust-enhancing features of distributed ledgers is expected to grow to $2.9 million in 2019
  • This would represent a growth of 88.7% over the $1.5 billion spent on the technology during 2018

By: Rick D.

The amount spent on blockchain technology by businesses seeking to utilise the trust-enhancing features of distributed ledgers is expected to grow to $2.9 million in 2019. This would represent a growth of 88.7% over the $1.5 billion spent on the technology during 2018.

The reported figures come from the International Data Corporation (IDC) who recently updated its “Worldwide Semiannual Blockchain Spending Guide.” According to a representative for the IDC, the tech has moved out of the design phase and into actual use and this shift will drive a lot of the expected spending through the next ten months.

New Industries Finding New Ways to Use Blockchain

The IDC report states that the financial sector will continue to account for the lion’s share of the spending on blockchain technology during 2019. The estimated figure here is $1.1 billion. This will come from a variety of interests, including: banking, securities and investment services, and insurers.

Another notable sector expected to be a part of the group of biggest blockchain spenders is that of manufacturing and resources. These industries will reportedly account for $653 million combined. They are also expected to see the largest growth in spending over the entire five year period with a CAGR of 77.6%.

Coming close behind manufacturing and resources is the distribution and services industries. Firms doing business in these industries  are expected to spend $642 billion on exploring and implementing blockchain technology during 2019.

Blockchain technology is being explored by a range of industries.

According to IDC vice president of the Customer Insights and Analysis programme, Jessica Goepfert, the technology is still very much in its infancy and businesses are still at the phase of explosive innovation when it comes to its implications:

“The use cases that comprise the blockchain opportunity are developing as swiftly as the technologies enabling it. While spending for more developed use cases in the financial sector like trade finance and cross-border payments is still healthy and growing strong, relative to six months ago we’ve seen an acceleration in spending across a variety of other areas, such as energy settlements and warranty claims.”

As part of the report, documenting the five year period between 2018 and 2022, the IDC states that it expects the total spent on blockchain to reach $12.4 billion by the final year of the sample.

A director of research at Worldwide Blockchain Strategies, James Webster, commented on the projected growth in spending on blockchain:

“Blockchain is maturing rapidly, and we have reached an inflection point where implementations are moving quickly beyond the pilot and proof of concept phase.”

According to Webster, the figures gathered by the IDC reports will give crucial insight into over the technology is being adopted by different industries and where it is having the largest impact.

Source: https://www.newsbtc.com/2019/03/04/blockchain-spending-2019-grow/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Why Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey Are Warming to Blockchain $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:19 AM on Thursday, March 28th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Why Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey Are Warming to Blockchain

Michael J. Casey is the chairman of CoinDesk’s advisory board and a senior advisor for blockchain research at MIT’s Digital Currency Initiative.

The following article originally appeared in CoinDesk Weekly, a custom-curated newsletter delivered every Sunday exclusively to our subscribers.

“Left to their own devices, computer scientists would recreate the Soviet Union.”

That line belongs to Preston McAfee, an economist whose job history includes senior positions at tech giants such as Microsoft, Google and Yahoo. As he explained to an audience at the SXSW conference in Austin, Texas, recently, it refers to software engineers’ tendency to favor centralization as the most efficient design principle for any computing system.

The point, he said, is that decentralized networks, such as those based on blockchain models, can often enable more positive overall social outcomes despite the relative inefficiency of their command-and-control architecture. It’s useful to contemplate this idea, and McAfee’s colorful metaphor, in relation to the current state of play on the Internet.

For the first time since they emerged as the victors of the post-dot-com bubble shakeout at the turn of the century, the platforms that dominate our online lives are running up against the social limits of their centralized models.

A backlash is emerging against “surveillance capitalism” and against the broad strategy of mining users’ data to capture audience for advertisers and to shape consumer behavior. Manifest as both political pressure and user rebellion, it is forcing a design rethink at these companies.

Perhaps the Internet is facing its Berlin Wall moment.

This is ultimately why some of the principles underlying blockchains and cryptocurrency technologies are finding favor in the business development strategies – or at least in the PR signaling – of social media companies.

Warming to Decentralized Models

Facebook especially has attracted much attention in this area.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently made a bombshell post outlining a “privacy-focused vision for social networking” that suggested a move to embrace end-to-end encryption of users’ data on Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.

In a separate post of a video interview with Harvard Law professor Jonathan Zittrain, Zuckerberg speculated on the prospect of Facebook using a blockchain model to enable decentralized logins without its servers acting as authenticators. All this came around the time The New York Times reported that Facebook is developing a digital currency that its users can trade among each other and exchange on cryptocurrency exchanges.

Meanwhile, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey appears to have gotten religion when it comes to cryptocurrencies. He has declared that bitcoin will be the “native currency of the Internet,” has invested in Lightning Labs, which is developing payment channels for bitcoin based on the lightning network, and recently announced that Square, the separate payments company that he heads, will hire crypto engineers and likely pay them in bitcoin.

It’s fair to say there is a significant degree of skepticism that social media companies, having made fortunes out of a centralized model that accumulates user data, will change their stripes.

Facebook, in particular, has come under criticism from pundits who argue that it won’t be able to shift its business model. Given data abuse scandals such as the Cambridge Analytica affair, skeptics such as cryptocurrency pioneer David Chaum argue that Zuckerberg’s decentralization and privacy mantra is nothing more than a PR message.

But the departure of certain senior executives, including those who oversaw the development of the centralized data-gathering model and the algorithms that mine that data to deliver audiences to advertisers, has led others to conclude that Zuckerberg is indeed serious.

Winds of Change

One thing’s clear: there’s pressure for change, whether it comes in substance or merely in message.

Much like citizens who reach a breaking point and rebel against political leaders who act in their own interests rather than those of the public, users of these social media platforms are starting to signal that they won’t stand for data abuses.

Obviously, without users, these businesses fail. So, these companies are now contemplating a revised model in which, to paraphrase Bruce Schneier, users are no longer the product but the customer.

It’s an open question whether such companies can make money on a model in which the nodes in the network are free from control by the center. But let’s continue with the McAfee-inspired metaphor and contemplate how governments in capitalist economies accrue power and influence when their citizens are empowered to transact with each other. Similarly, we can imagine how a Facebook or a Twitter that helps its vast number of users conduct peer-to-peer exchanges can extract great value from the expansion of such networks.

Either way, the winds of change are coming to the centralized systems of the Internet. Whether the incumbents survive those changes, or whether they go the way of, say, MySpace is not clear. More important, let’s consider what might arise in their place and how smoothly we transition to the new era.

These are questions for developers of decentralized solutions such as those enabled by blockchain technology. What kind of governance models will be in place so that users are truly able to maintain a healthy degree of autonomy even as new centralizing forces emerge to extract value within the new paradigm?

Remember, the Soviet Union collapsed, but it was hardly replaced by a utopia.

Image via CoinDesk archives 

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/why-mark-zuckerberg-and-jack-dorsey-are-warming-to-blockchain

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Crypto Trader DataDash Says #Bitcoin Is Bottoming – Plus #Ripple and #XRP, #Ethereum, #Tron, #Litecoin, #IOTA, #Stellar

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:45 AM on Monday, March 25th, 2019

SPONSOR: ThreeD Capital Inc. (IDK:CSE) Led by legendary financier, Sheldon Inwentash, ThreeD is a Canadian-based venture capital firm that only invests in best of breed small-cap companies which are both defensible and mass scalable. More than just lip service, Inwentash has financed many of Canada’s biggest small-cap exits. Click Here For More Information.

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Crypto Trader DataDash Says Bitcoin Is Bottoming – Plus Ripple and XRP, Ethereum, Tron, Litecoin, IOTA, Stellar

  • From Bitcoin’s price action to the adoption of XRP, Stellar, and Litecoin, here’s a look at some of the stories breaking in the world of crypto.
  • YouTube’s biggest crypto analyst Nicholas Merten says he believes Bitcoin is bottoming.

Bitcoin

YouTube’s biggest crypto analyst Nicholas Merten says he believes Bitcoin is bottoming.

In the latest edition of DataDash, Merten compares BTC’s current price action to the market decline in 2014 and subsequent sideways trading in 2015, and says three indicators suggest Bitcoin is entering a period of sideways consolidation before a run to the upside.

Merten says the 50 and 100-week moving averages, stochastic RSI and true strength indicator all signal BTC is starting to enter a bottoming phase.

“We’re going to need to see much more substantial price action for Bitcoin to be considered in a bull market. So we’re in neither really a bear market as of the last few weeks, and we’re also not in a bull market. Again, we have to see a justification of price on either side.”

According to Merten’s analysis, current market conditions indicate it will take a few weeks or months for Bitcoin to start gaining momentum.

Ripple and XRP

Days after adding XRP to its platform, the Bahrain-based crypto exchange Rain says the digital asset has officially been declared Sharia-compliant in an audit from their partner, the Shariyah Review Bureau.

Our Shari’a compliance audit was completed by our partner @ShariyahReview.

— Rain (@rainfinancial) March 24, 2019

Ripple has been pushing to expand its presence in the Middle East, announcing an expansion in the region late last year.

Ethereum

Mist, one of the first projects from the Ethereum Foundation, is shutting down. The Mist browser, also known as the Ethereum DApp Browser, allowed users to access Ethereum applications and projects. The Mist wallet, designed to be downloaded and run on a computer, allowed users to store, send and receive crypto.

In a farewell post, developer Alex Van de Sande outlines a number of the project’s technical problems, and names Samsung, Opera and Brave as projects that are better suited to move the tech forward.

“While I’m proud of all the accomplishments we achieved in this time advancing the usability of Ethereum and sharing a vision for web3, we feel Mist, the browser has outlived it’s usefulness: the ecosystem has matured so much that now the user has tons of great options of wallets and browsers on both mobile and desktop.”

This is a bitter post to announce, but we are discontinuing Mist. You can read the full post here but for your convenience I will try to summarize in a few tweets: https://t.co/eqw5yWacsa

There are mainly two reasons a good and a bad one: ecosystem and security

— alex van de sande (@avsa) March 22, 2019

Litecoin

Jon Moore aka ‘Johnny Litecoin’, the vice president of Nationwide Merchant Solutions, is showing off Litecoin’s integration with the payment system Clover.

Checkout the Clover Flex device!! #Clover devices can easily display a #Litecoin Payment button with QR code printing on receipt for easy payment. Clover also integrates with @ecwid which allows for LTC/BTC Payments to come in from online and the data connects to Clover!! pic.twitter.com/WNVRG3BYKP

— Jon Moore (@jonnylitecoin) March 20, 2019

The Clover platform offers free open-source code allowing merchants to implement custom third-party payment options.

Stellar

The foreign exchange company Currency Matters says it’s joining IBM’s World Wire remittance platform, which is powered by the Stellar blockchain.

“By connecting to the World Wire network, Currency Matters now has access to a single unified network for foreign exchange and cross-border payments clearing and settlement built on blockchain technology and the Stellar public protocol. This will allow Currency Matters to offer clients the ability to conduct transactions across additional currency corridors and provide access to new digital assets including stable coins using Stellar Lumens (XLM).”

So far, IBM says six banks have signed letters of intent to issue their own stablecoins on the platform.

Tron

The Tron community site Tron.Live is giving crypto enthusiasts an inside look at Tron’s headquarters in Beijing. It occupies two floors with modern flair, lime green accents, wall art, smiling stuffed animals, a circular resting area, a tatami room and a rainbow-colored entertainment lounge. Source: Tron.Live

Tron currently has offices in San Francisco, Singapore and Beijing.

IOTA

IOTA just released the latest edition of the Untangled podcast. The episode explores the platform’s push for smart city adoption, focusing on the energy sector and what the cities of the near future may look like.

Source: https://dailyhodl.com/2019/03/25/crypto-trader-datadash-says-bitcoin-is-bottoming-plus-ripple-and-xrp-ethereum-tron-litecoin-iota-stellar/