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ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – The radical idea hiding inside #Facebook $FB digital currency #Libra proposal $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:27 AM on Wednesday, June 26th, 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 radical idea hiding inside Facebook’s digital currency proposal

  • A major goal of the Libra Association, the nonprofit Facebook has created to manage the project’s development, is to use Libra to revolutionize the concept of digital identity.
  • Relevant passage lives near the bottom of a document meant to explain the role of the Libra Association:
  • “An additional goal of the association is to develop and promote an open identity standard.

by Mike Orcutt

Last week, after months of hype and speculation, Facebook finally revealed its plan to launch a blockchain system, called Libra. Since the launch, most of the attention has focused on Libra coin, the cryptocurrency that will run on the new blockchain.

But tucked away in one of the documents Facebook published is something that may turn out to be just as important as the coin—if not more so. A major goal of the Libra Association, the nonprofit Facebook has created to manage the project’s development, is to use Libra to revolutionize the concept of digital identity.

The relevant passage lives near the bottom of a document meant to explain the role of the Libra Association: “An additional goal of the association is to develop and promote an open identity standard. We believe that decentralized and portable digital identity is a prerequisite to financial inclusion and competition.”

But what is a “decentralized and portable digital identity”? In theory, it provides a way to avoid having to trust a single, centralized authority to verify and take care of our identifying credentials. For internet users, it would mean that instead of relying on Facebook or Google’s own log-in tool to provide our credentials to other websites, we could own and control them ourselves. In theory, this could better protect that information from hackers and identity thieves, since it wouldn’t live on company servers.

The concept (sometimes called “self-sovereign identity”) is something of a holy grail in the world of internet technology, and developers have been pursuing it for years. Big companies including Microsoft and IBM have been working on decentralized identity applications for a while now, and so have a number of startups.

But it’s more than just an internet thing. For the roughly one billion people around the world without any kind of identifying credentials at all, such technology could make it possible to access financial services that they cannot today, starting with things like bank accounts and loans.

Helping some of those people must be part of what Facebook meant when it said in the Libra white paper that the new system is intended to “serve as an efficient medium of exchange for billions of people around the world” and “improve access to financial services.” In some cases the currency itself might be able to do that, but in others it’s likely that users will need some form of identification to access a particular service. That’s probably why Libra’s developers call an open, portable identity standard a “prerequisite to financial inclusion.”

But such a digital identity could go beyond finance, too. Sharing many kinds of sensitive data using a blockchain—for instance, health information—might require some form of automated ID check. 

Facebook itself already has experience with digital identities. Facebook Connect lets users log in to third party sites using their Facebook-verified credentials (you might be using it to access technologyreview.com right now). But Facebook Connect is risky because it relies on a central authority, argues Christopher Allen, cochair of the credentials community group of the World Wide Web Consortium, the most important international standards body for the web. Trusting one entity with this responsibility is dangerous because the site could go down or the business could fail. And Facebook can revoke accounts at will.

But it’s hard to say how decentralized Libra’s new identity system would be, because Facebook hasn’t revealed anything about what it’s planning.

For example, there’s the possibility that the digital identity will only work inside the Libra network, which requires permission to participate in. Unlike systems like Bitcoin and Ethereum, for which anyone with the right hardware and an internet connection can join and help validate transactions, Libra requires its validators to be identified and approved. Nearly 30 companies have already signed up to run network “nodes,” and Libra’s developers want to up that to 100 by the time the platform is supposed to launch for real next year.

Facebook’s main message with the launch of Libra and the Libra Association appears to be a response to past criticisms of how it handled personal data. The company appears to be saying “Hey, look, we’re trying to be more open. We don’t want to be this honey pot of everyone’s information,” says Wayne Vaughan, co-founder of the Decentralized Identity Foundation, a consortium of companies all working on aspects of blockchain-based identity. But if whatever identity standard they might come up with only works for 100 companies, says Vaughan, “that’s not decentralized”—it’s just a standard for 100 companies. Facebook did not respond to a request for comment.

Either way, it’s not clear how Facebook and the Libra Association would overcome some big technical challenges that have held back blockchain-based identity systems. For one, blockchains are still hard to use for many people. A problem that is particularly difficult for identity applications is that if you lose or forget your private keys, which aren’t easy to manage in the first place, it’s hard to restore them, says Allen.

Another technical challenge pertains to privacy. How will the personal identification data be kept separate from financial transactions? This piece is particularly concerning for privacy advocates in the context of Libra, given Facebook’s less-than-stellar track record. And an aversion to financial surveillance fuels much of the cryptocurrency movement.

“Where you spend your money and who you spend it with and how much you spend is some of the most private information for people,” says Vaughan.

On the whole, says Allen, though the technology of decentralized identity has advanced to the point of several serious pilot tests, it’s “not anywhere near ready” for adoption by billions of people around the world. And given what the company has revealed so far, “I don’t see how Facebook can do it,” he says.

Source: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/613877/how-facebooks-new-blockchain-might-revolutionize-our-digital-identities/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – What #Bitcoin Breaking $11,000 Means for the #Crypto Market’s Future $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 4:36 PM on Tuesday, June 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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What Bitcoin Breaking $11,000 Means for the Crypto Market’s Future

  • Bitcoin, which collapsed to a low of $3,100 in December, smashed through the $11,000 mark on Sunday after breaking through the critical $10,000 level.
  • Both levels were considered highly unlikely only a few weeks ago.

By Shoshanna Delventhal Updated Jun 25, 2019

Bitcoin, which collapsed to a low of $3,100 in December, smashed through the $11,000 mark on Sunday after breaking through the critical $10,000 level. Both levels were considered highly unlikely only a few weeks ago. At a price just under $11,000 on Monday evening, the world’s largest digital coin by market capitalization recovered over half its historic increase during the peak of the crypto frenzy when it neared $20,000 before crashing almost 75%. 

Bitcoin’s continued rise, which is also fueling rallies in Asian cryptocurrency stocks, illustrates the currency’s resilience in the face of major skepticism and also cryptocurrency’s widening acceptance by major established companies such as Facebook Inc. (FB), investment behemoth Fidelity, and others, as outlined in a detailed Bloomberg report. 

Crypto Money Has Been ‘Waiting on the Sidelines’

“The bounce back of Bitcoin has been fairly extraordinary,” said George McDonaugh, chief executive and co-founder of London-based blockchain and cryptocurrency investment firm KR1 Plc, to Bloomberg just after the virtual currency breached the key $10,000 level on Friday. It was the first time that Bitcoin had reached that level in roughly 15 months. “Money didn’t leave the asset behind, it just sat on the sidelines waiting to get back in.” 

Some traders and ultra-bulls are betting Bitcoin can hit $50,000, per The Wall Street Journal.

This in part due to renewed mainstream interest in cryptocurrencies and the distributed ledger technology that it runs on. Facebook’s Libra is perhaps the highest profile crypto project, as the social media pioneer partners with companies such as Visa Inc. (V) and Uber Technologies Inc. (UBER) to build the system. 

Asian Crypto-Stocks Gain Momentum Alongside Bitcoin Rally

The crypto rally coincided with a rally in related stocks in Asia on Monday, per another Bloomberg report. In Tokyo, GMO Internet Inc. jumped 7%, while Metaphs Inc. climbed 11%, Remixpoint Inc. 6.2%, and Ceres Inc. increased 4.4%. In South Korea, Vidente Co. increased 5.4%, and Woori Technology Investment Co. jumped 4.6%. 

Supun Walpola, an analyst with LightStream, attributes gains in Asian crypto-stocks to Bitcoin’s resurgence. â€œGoing long on stocks that have exposure to cryptocurrency is something that we have seen in the past during a Bitcoin/cryptocurrency bull run — especially with those who want to avoid the volatility of crypto but at the same time want to have some exposure into these markets,” he said, adding that the increase in stock prices for these crypto companies typically increase more than the actual benefit that these firms would get during a crypto surge. This has “always resulted in immediate corrections,” Walpola wrote in an email to Bloomberg

That said, investors should check themselves before investing in crypto stocks despite their relatively lower risk, given “such strategies have often gone wrong when crypto markets turn red — which could happen just about at any time,” said the analyst. 

While Bitcoin has eased back below $11,000 it is still dramatically higher than the $10,000 support level. Bitcoin’s 2019 rebound – and that of other cryptocurrencies – will be tested by the latest calls by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for new global regulatory standards to bring cryptocurrency “out of the shadows” and to prevent illicit financing by criminals, terrorists and rogue nations. Crypto bulls say these rules would hobble the young industry, as outlined in another Bloomberg report. 

Looking Ahead 

Despite the growing demand for cryptocurrencies and signs that the long “crypto winter” is over, various headwinds threaten to pull Bitcoin back below $10,000, likely resulting in a downfall for the rest of the nascent industry. These risks position the digital coin for continued volatility as demonstrated in May. Alongside other downside drivers, the fact that bitcoins are used mostly for speculation, not commerce, has also been a main concern cited by bears.

Source: https://www.investopedia.com/what-bitcoin-breaking-usd11-000-means-for-crypto-market-s-future-4691230

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #TechCrunch Founder Sells $1.6 Million House on #Crypto Real Estate Platform $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:49 AM on Tuesday, June 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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TechCrunch Founder Sells $1.6 Million House on Crypto Real Estate Platform

  • Propy, a blockchain based real estate platform, announced the sale of a $1.6 million San Francisco property owned by the venture capital fund CrunchFund, co-founded by Michael Arrington.
  • Announcement follows news of Propy’s highest cost transaction to date, a $2.4 million duplex in San Francisco, completed entirely on the platform.

Daniel Kuhn

Propy, a blockchain based real estate platform, announced the sale of a $1.6 million San Francisco property owned by the venture capital fund CrunchFund, co-founded by Michael Arrington.

The announcement follows news of Propy’s highest cost transaction to date, a $2.4 million duplex in San Francisco, completed entirely on the platform.

Propy is a real-estate transaction platform that empowers buyers, sellers, their agents, and escrow agents to close a traditional real estate deal entirely online. The purchase offer, payment and deeds are uploaded to an immutable blockchain.

“The traditional real estate sale process is arduous and broken. Buyers, sellers, and their professional support struggle with overly complex interactions – it’s an opaque, dated, and unnecessarily lengthy process, full of risks such as wire fraud,” said Arrington, founder of TechCrunch, whose most recent venture is into blockchain capital investments and management with his $100m firm, Arrington XRP Capital.

“When it comes to expensive property or other expensive goods, these normally already have digital presentation of ownership, that’s why blockchain is applicable to space,” said CEO Natalia Karayaneva. “Blockchain’s main implications, after [virtual] money, is as a technology that enables ownership transfers… it aligns the entire process of any value transfer including real estate.”

Propy completed its first deal in 2017, and its first US transaction in Vermont 12 months ago. Worldwide, they have assisted in some form in over 60 real estate transfers. This includes auctioning a 17th century Italian mansion and UNESCO site on its blockchain.

The median price of a house sold on its platform is around $1.5 million, said Karayaneva, though the value of the houses is steadily increasing. About 20 realtors have closed deals on the platform, though 3,000 have signed up.

Karayaneva believes in two or three years the majority of real estate transactions will be entirely digitized. The company is working with county governments to provide technology that automatically and immediately reports the transfer of title deeds.

“We don’t want to work against them. Either we help them or will eliminate them,” she said.

The venture capital arm of the U.S. National Association of Realtors (NAR) recently invested an undisclosed amount in Propy via its REACH accelerator program. The company also raised $15.5 million via an initial coin offering in 2017.

Arrington previously purchased a $60,000 apartment in Kiev through Propy, using ethereum and smart contracts to settle the deal.

Source: https://www.coindesk.com/techcrunch-founder-sells-1-6-million-house-on-blockchain-real-estate-platform

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Industry bigwigs explain #blockchain in as few words as possible $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:22 PM on Wednesday, June 19th, 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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Industry bigwigs explain ‘blockchain’ in as few words as possible

At this year’s annual TNW conference, Hard Fork took the opportunity to ask a number of industry experts to explain blockchain in as few words as possible. We hoped to get a bit of insight into how the tech is developing and what the industry currently makes of it.

Here’s what they said:

1. “Blockchain is a chain of blocks. That’s the definition, anything else is wrong.” – João Almeida, co-founder and CTO of Opennode – the Bitcoin payments system that recently helped Lil Pump’s merch store accept Bitcoin.

2. “Blockchain is the freedom to trade.” – Kirill Suslov, the CEO and co-founder of cryptocurrency trading platform TabTrader.

3. “Blockchain is a hash-linked data format.” – Francis Pouliot, CEO of Canadian Bitcoin company Bull Bitcoin.

4. “A new technology enabling us to take the control and governance of information from the few, and to the many.” – Jessi Baker from Provenance, a firm using blockchain to make supply chains more transparent.

5. “Blockchain is simple, take a bunch of transaction, record them as a unique block, and link all these blocks together.”– Ricardo Mendez, the European technical director from Samsung’s emerging tech investment arm, Samsung NEXT.

The take away?

There is some consistency in what is being described here. Interestingly though, all the people Hard Fork asked steered clear of the common buzzwords that tend to accompany blockchain in the media.

Blockchains are often described as being immutable, tamper-resistant, and decentralized. However, with private permissioned systems being the preferred type of blockchain for institutional use, these buzzwords aren’t always so applicable.

It seems too, that blockchain’s definition is, from this small sample at least, broadening so that it can include all kinds of distributed databases and applications with varying levels of decentralization.

Baker’s response also highlights the undeniable politic that’s associated with the decentralized tech too.

We’ll have to remember that when someone says blockchain, what they mean specifically, isn’t always that simple or universal.

Source: https://thenextweb.com/hardfork/2019/06/19/blockchain-explained-industry/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Crypto is coming: get ready to spend #Facebook’s $FB money $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:59 AM on Monday, June 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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Crypto is coming: get ready to spend Facebook’s money

The social network is likely to release details of its cryptocurrency this week: and it won’t be much like Bitcoin

First it had your friends, then it had your pictures, then it had your diary. Now, in the latest effort to entwine its systems still further into the everyday lives of its users, Facebook wants to get into your wallet.

On Tuesday, the social media behemoth is expected to reveal its own cryptocurrency, which has variously been called Libra and GlobalCoin. However, unlike other cryptocurrencies, the new creation will not have been founded in the spirit of libertarianism, outside the backing of established, conventional authorities. Instead, it appears to have the endorsement of more than 12 corporations, from Uber to PayPal, Visa and Mastercard.

Since they have risen to prominence over the past decade, cryptocurrencies have conjured up visions of a wild west of finance, where values fluctuate wildly and terrorists and drug dealers come piling in.

Facebook’s new venture appears to be somewhat removed from that image. Reports suggest that the new currency will be overseen by a group of companies that have each invested some $10m to join a consortium and administer it. 

Another indication that the Facebook currency will be different from its predecessors is the fact that it will be pegged to a number of government-issued currencies, in a bid to avoid the vast value fluctuations that have dogged other digital currencies. 

That inconsistency in valuation is best illustrated by the price of Bitcoin, which was initially sold for a few cents before it reached a record high of just under $20,000 per coin in December 2017. Each one now sells for just over $8,300.

The Facebook project is expected to cost $1bn and has been in development for a year. It should enable Facebook’s 2.4 billion monthly users to change dollars and other international currencies into its digital coins. The currency can then be used to buy goods on the internet – and in shops and other outlets – or to transfer money, without the need for a bank account.

Facebook’s founder, Mark Zuckerberg, met the governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, last month to talk about his plans, and has also discussed the matter with US Treasury officials.

“Payments is one of the areas where we have an opportunity to make it a lot easier,” Zuckerberg told the company’s developer conference in April.

“I believe it should be as easy to send money to someone as it is to send a photo.”

It is expected that Facebook will aim to shatter the poor image of cryptocurrencies, which were initially widely used by criminals to make transactions on the dark web.

It has been reported that Facebook will not directly control the currency but that some members of the consortium will act as “nodes” within the system that can give the green light to transactions.

Reports also suggest that hotels website Booking.com and the payments technology company Stripe have signed up. It is expected that Facebook will release a briefing on the new cryptocurrency this week.

Concerns have been raised, however, that regulatory issues and Facebook’s hitherto poor track record on data privacy and protection are likely to prove major hurdles on the way to making any cryptocurrency a success.

Facebook is also looking at paying users fractions of a coin for activities such as viewing ads and interacting with content related to online shopping, in a system similar to the loyalty schemes run by retailers.

The powerful in tech…

… must keep being challenged with bold investigative journalism. It’s been a year since The Observer and The Guardian broke the story that became the Cambridge Analytica scandal, exposing the truth and shedding light on the reality of foul play within the tech industry. We saw how personal data could be harvested on an unprecedented scale to fulfil the ambitions of the powerful. Through this courageous investigative reporting, we shamed Facebook, and prompted a global conversation about the importance of data privacy, holding tech companies to account and pressuring governments to enact regulation.

The Guardian is committed to continuing this vital work; we will keep persevering, uncovering and challenging those with so much power in the tech industry. This has never been so pressing: we’re living in a time when the integrity of our democracy and the legitimacy of our votes are in question. Political campaigns reside in our many digital feeds and, with each year, this will become ever more prominent. The world needs journalism that promotes transparency and investigates where others won’t go. Reader support means The Guardian can keep investigating the critical issues of our time.

The Guardian is editorially independent, meaning we set our own agenda. Our journalism is free from commercial bias and not influenced by billionaire owners, politicians or shareholders. No one edits our editor. No one steers our opinion. This is important as it enables us to give a voice to those less heard, challenge the powerful and hold them to account. It’s what makes us different to so many others in the media, at a time when factual, honest reporting is critical.

Every contribution we receive from readers like you, big or small, goes directly into funding our journalism. This support enables us to keep working as we do – but we must maintain and build on it for every year to come.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/jun/16/facebook-cryptocurrency-get-ready-to-spend-money

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Apple $AAPL Publishes #Bitcoin Icons & ‘CryptoKit’; #iPhone #Crypto Wallet Coming? $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:19 AM on Tuesday, June 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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Apple Publishes Bitcoin Icons & ‘CryptoKit’; iPhone Crypto Wallet Coming?

  • The new Mac Pro is grabbing the headlines while a ‘CryptoKit’ for developers is getting crypto adopters excited. | Source: Photo by Brittany Hosea-Small

By CCN: Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) is underway, and while most of the focus is on iOS3, Apple quietly revealed a new upgrade for developers called CryptoKit.

Apple also released its new icon set for designers which feature four bitcoin logo

It begs the question, what are Apple’s plans for cryptocurrency integration?

Apple’s Frederic Jacobs announced new CryptoKit for developers

Apple CryptoKit: a path to a hardware wallet?

CryptoKit provides developers with a new toolkit for cryptographic functionality. It means app developers can integrate operations like hashing, key generation, and encryption. In particular, CryptoKit will facilitate the use of public and private key management.

“Use public-key cryptography to create and evaluate digital signatures, and to perform key exchange. In addition to working with keys stored in memory, you can also use private keys stored in and managed by the Secure Enclave.”

Viktor Radchenko, founder of TrustWallet, said CryptoKit brings Apple one step closer to full hardware wallet functionality.

“Only a few steps away before you can turn your phone into a hardware wallet.”

TrustWallet’s Viktor Radchenko said Apple is one step closer to facilitating a hardware wallet

Apple’s Frederic Jacobs, part of the cryptographic and security engineering team, said CryptoKit is “a fast and secure Swift API to perform cryptographic operations.”

Jacobs did not respond to a request for further comment at the time of publishing.

Apple bitcoin icons

The company also released the new San Francisco icon set designed for iOS3. Among the set of 1,000 icons are four bitcoin logos. Two circular BTC logos and two square. There are no ethereum logos or any other cryptocurrency.

Apple releases new icon set complete with bitcoin logos

The new icon set means developers can easily integrate bitcoin icons into their apps.

Apple following Samsung’s cryptocurrency lead?

As CCN has extensively reported, Samsung has taken the initiative with cryptocurrency integration. The Samsung Galaxy S10 launched earlier this year with an integrated hardware wallet designed to store private keys. 

Samsung is also reportedly readying crypto asset integration into Samsung Pay, a payment system with over 10 million users. And in May, CCN reported that Samsung plans to extend its hardware wallet into budget Galaxy models too.

Everything we know about CryptoKit

Apple’s CryptoKit will allow developers to perform common cryptographic operations, such as:

“Compute and compare cryptographically secure digests” and “generate symmetric keys, and use them in operations like message authentication and encryption.”

For developers, it provides a toolkit to build more secure apps and frees apps from handling raw pointers.

The tech giant will reveal more about CryptoKit in a WWDC session on Wednesday

Still too early to predict Apple’s crypto plans

It’s too early to draw any conclusions about Apple’s cryptocurrency plans, if there are any. But at least Apple is providing the tools for cryptocurrency developers to build on iOS. For now, consider this the start of a much longer story.

Ben Brown

Ben is a journalist with a decade of experience covering financial markets. His writing has appeared in The Huffington Post and he worked at Block Explorer, the world’s longest-running source of Blockchain data. Reach him at benjamin-brown.uk

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Big banks are launching a #blockchain trade platform powered by ‘Bitcoin-like’ token $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:47 AM on Monday, June 3rd, 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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Big banks are launching a blockchain trade platform powered by ‘Bitcoin-like’ token

  • The financial giants have poured over $60 million into the new company, called Fnality International.
  • The token, which has been in the works for four years now, will function both as a payment device and a “messenger that carries all the information required to complete a trade,” according to the report.

Story by: Mix

The banking industry wants to blockchain too

The banking industry is hell-bent on taking over the nascent blockchain and cryptocurrency market. A group of financial firms led by UBS Group AG is eyeing blockchain technology for settling cross-border trades worldwide with its own “Bitcoin-like” token. 

The 14 firms – including Barclays, Nasdaq, Credit Suisse Group, Banco Santander, ING, and Lloyds Banking Group – have registered a new entity to control the devleopment of the token, dubbed ‘utility settlement coin’ (or USC for short), The Wall Street Journal reports

The financial giants have poured over $60 million into the new company, called Fnality International. The token, which has been in the works for four years now, will function both as a payment device and a “messenger that carries all the information required to complete a trade,” according to the report.

The new permissioned blockchain system will purportedly make cross-border trades much faster and less risky. “You remove settlement risk, the counterparty risk, the market risk,” UBS investment strategy head Hyder Jaffrey told the WSJ. “All of those risks add up to costs and inefficiencies in the marketplace.”

In addition to the previously mentioned institutions, Bank of New York Mellon Corp., Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce , State Street Bank & Trust Co., Commerzbank AG, KBC Group NV, Mitsubishi UFG Financial Group Inc., and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp have also agreed to use the USC token.

The new platform is expected to take off within the next 12 months, which corroborates past reports suggesting the platform will be fully operational by 2020.

It remains to be seen if USC is more of a cryptocurrency than JP Morgan’s token, though.

Source: https://thenextweb.com/hardfork/2019/06/03/lloyds-barclays-bank-blockchain-ubs/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Debunking the Top 5 #Blockchain Myths $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:47 AM on Wednesday, May 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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Debunking the Top 5 Blockchain Myths

Satoshi Nakamoto’s seminal paper “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System,” published in 2009, which took cues from “How to Time-Stamp a Digital Document,” published by Stuart Haber and W. Scott Stornetta in 1991, sparked a feeding frenzy of accolades for blockchains which inscribed an urban legend about trusted public decentralized blockchains, a historical departure from the mediation of brokers and third parties. The first paper sought to create trust in digital currencies by solving the decades-old “double spend” problem associated with digital currencies with applied cryptography and the second by preventing the tampering of digital documents with time stamping.

The information, documents, transactions or digital coins are mathematically protected with hard-to-crack hash functions that create a block and interconnect it to previously created blocks. To validate the new chain of blocks, it is then broadcasted and shared, to a distributed network of computers, to collectively agree about the authenticity of the transactions, using additional mathematics of a consensus algorithm. The entire cryptographic proof of transactions is stored as an immutable record on a distributed and shared ledger, or the blockchain. “In effect, this is triple entry accounting which includes the two entries of the transacting parties and a third record for the public, registered on a public distributed ledger, which cannot be tampered with,” Ricardo Diaz, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based founder of Blockchain CLT and management consultant for commercialization of enterprise blockchains, told us.

Rising from the trough of disillusionment, the myths around public centralized blockchains have been reexamined and we will now assess the controversy. (Blockchain is being used for much more than just cryptocurrency. Learn more in Why Data Scientists Are Falling in Love with Blockchain Technology.)

Myth #1: Private permissioned blockchains cannot be secure.

Private permissioned blockchains are a contradiction in terms and public blockchains are the only secure and viable option. Public blockchains gain trust by consensus, which is not possible when private blockchains need permission for a small group of people.

In actual implementations, centrally controlled private or federated permissioned blockchains, albeit distributed, are common. Federated blockchains focus on specific verticals such as R3 Corda for banks, EWF for energy and B3i for insurance companies. The motivation to keep a blockchain private is confidentiality and certainty of regulatory compliance as in banking, unique needs such as in renewable energy where small producers need to connect with consumers, or the fear of cost overruns or underwhelming performance of unproven technologies as in insurance.

The jury is still out whether private blockchains will last beyond their pilot programs. TradeLens is one private blockchain which IBM created with Maersk, the largest container company in the world. According to press reports, the project has gotten off to a slow start as other carriers, which could be potential partners, have expressed skepticism about the benefits they will realize from joining.

Steve Wilson, VP and Principal Analyst at Constellation Research, cautioned against a rush to judgment. “IBM is moving slowly because it is bringing together a group of partners who have not worked together before. They are also transitioning from a world where trades were mediated by brokers to an unfamiliar world of direct trading. The trade documentation is convoluted, and IBM is trying to avoid errors,” he told us.

Fundamentally, Wilson does not see a well-defined use case for public blockchains. “Public blockchains overlook the plain fact that any business solution is inseparable from people and processes. The double spend problem does not exist when transactions in physical worlds are tracked at each stage,” he concluded.

By contrast, private blockchains, such as Corda in financial services, are solving real problems. “The supervision of private blockchains by credible stewards narrows down the problem of trust. Private blockchain realize efficiency gains from a common and secure distributed ledger which takes advantage of the cryptography, time-stamping, and smart contracts which were prototyped in public blockchains,” Wilson explained.

Myth #2: Hybrid blockchains are an incompatible mix of private and public.

Public, permissionless decentralized blockchains and private centrally controlled permissioned blockchains are mutually exclusive. They seek to create a trustworthy environment for transactions in entirely different ways which are not compatible. It is not possible to have a combination of the private and the public in a single secure chain.

Hybrid combinations emerge as the market matures and dispel the skepticism about the early forms of new technologies. Just like the precursors to the internet were intranets and extranets which evolved into the internet with sites searchable with browsers; the cloud followed a similar path and hybrid clouds are widely accepted these days.

In the crypto community, there are two camps: the public, permissionless blockchains and private, permissioned blockchain. According to Diaz:

The private blockchain side has historically presumed to require miners and a cryptocurrency financial incentive to validate the blockchain was unnecessary. Today, new blockchain projects support private and public distributed ledger technologies. Ternio.io, an enterprise blockchain platform, leverages Hyperledger Fabric (a permissioned blockchain technology) AND Stellar (a permissionless blockchain). Veridium.io, a carbon credit marketplace blockchain project, also has a similar DLT architecture.

Diaz also noted:

Jaime Dimon, CEO of JPMC, who dismissed bitcoin as a fraud, has not only invested in building a popular, secure, private blockchain called Quorum, but also introduced an enterprise stable coin (a type of cryptocurrency token) called the JPM Coin. It was built using the Ethereum blockchain code base, a public blockchain protocol, and the privacy technology from ZCash, another public but more secure blockchain protocol. Security on Quorum is reinforced by secure enclave technology which is hardware-based encryption.

Quorum is not a hybrid blockchain that has public and private blockchains working together, but it incorporates the code from public blockchains and cryptocurrencies that are normally integral to public blockchains. It creates a fork on Ethereum to create a private blockchain. There are other hybrid blockchains in which private and public blockchains play complementary roles.

Hybrid blockchains have a compelling value that is driving skeptical enterprise clients to progress from private blockchains to hybrid ones that incorporate public blockchains and token economics on an as-needed basis. The bridges between the private and the public chains in the hybrid blockchain ensure that the security is not compromised, and intruders are disincentivized by requiring them to pay to cross the bridge.

Hybrid crypto networks of the future will be more secure than anything the internet, Web 2.0, has today. Diaz explained:

Crypto mesh networks that are supported by crypto routers, like the wireless router in your home, will only process transactions that are cryptographically secured not only with blockchain technology but also true crypto economics. Imagine a crypto router or device that requires a small amount of cryptocurrency to process a transaction like an email between two parties. This one key difference will drastically impact hackers across the planet who are used to freely hacking computers and networking them together to launch a massive denial of service attack on some business. On the Decentralized Web, Web 3.0, the hacker would have to pay upfront for his/her bot army to launch the same attack. That is token economics crushing a major cybersecurity issue.

Myth #3: Data is immutable in any circumstance.

A cornerstone of public blockchains is the immutability of the pool of the data for all transactions that it stores.

The reality is that public blockchains have been compromised either by an accumulated majority, also known as a “51% attack” of the mining power by leasing equipment rather than purchasing it, and profit from their attacks or by bad code in poorly written smart contracts.

Rogue governments are another cybersecurity risk. “Private individuals respond to incentives for keeping the data honest. My worry is governments who have other non-economic objectives immune to financial incentives,” David Yermack, Professor of Finance at the Stern Business School in New York University, surmised.

Public blockchains have to come to grips with the fact that human error is possible despite all the vetting — it happens in any human endeavor. Immutability breaks when corrections are made. Ethereum was split into Ethereum Classic and Ethereum following the DAO attack which exploited a vulnerability in a wallet built on the platform.

“The Bitcoin blockchain network has never been hacked. The Ethereum blockchain has suffered attacks but the majority of them can be attributed to bad code in smart contracts. Over the last two years, an entirely new cybersecurity sector has emerged for the auditing of smart contract code to mitigate the common risks of the past,” Diaz told us. Auditing of software associated with blockchains, including smart contracts, helps to plug the vulnerabilities in supporting software that exposes blockchains to cybersecurity risks. (For more on blockchain security, see Can the Blockchain Be Hacked?)

Myth #4: Private keys are always secure in the wallets of their owners.

Blockchains rely on public key infrastructure (PKI) technology for security, which includes a private key to identify individuals. These private keys are protected by cryptography and their codes are not known to anyone except their owners.

The reality is that in 2018 over $1 billion in cryptocurrency was stolen.

The myth about the privacy and security of private keys rests on the assumption that they cannot be hacked. Dr. Mordechai Guri of the Ben-Gurion University in Israel demonstrated how to steal private keys when they are transferred from a safe location, unconnected with any network, to a mobile device for usage. The security vulnerability is in the networks and associated processes.

“Today there are many best practices and technologies that reduce the risk of this perceived weakness in basic cryptography to protect private keys. Hardware wallets, paper wallets, cold wallets and multi-signature (multi-sig) enabled wallets all significantly reduce this risk of a compromised private key,” Diaz informed us.

Myth #5: Two-factor authentication keeps hot wallets secure.

My private keys are safe on a crypto exchange like Coinbase or Gemini. The added security of two-factor authentication (2FA) these sites provide in their hot wallets can’t fail.

A crypto hot wallet cybersecurity hack that is becoming more and more common is called SIM hijacking, which subverts two-factor authentication. Panda Security explains how hackers receive verification passcodes by activating your number on a SIM card in their possession. This is usually effective when someone wants to reset your password or already knows your password and wants to go through the two-step verification process.

“If you must purchase cryptocurrency through a decentralized or centralized crypto exchange, leverage a third-party 2FA service like Google Authenticator or Microsoft Authenticator, NOT SMS 2FA,” Diaz advised.

Conclusion

Distributed ledger technologies and blockchain technologies are evolving, and the current perceptions about their risk are more muted as new innovations emerge to solve their inadequacies. Although it is still early days for the crypto industry, when Web 3.0 and decentralized computing become more mainstream, we will live in a world that will put more trust in math and less in humans.

Source: https://www.techopedia.com/debunking-the-top-5-blockchain-myths/2/33796

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – What Could #Google’s $GOOGL Blockchain Mean For #Bitcoin? $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:34 AM on Tuesday, May 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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What Could Google’s Blockchain Mean For Bitcoin?

  • A Google led blockchain promises to totally change the way blockchain technology exists in the world.
  • Of course, Google have not yet confirmed that they are building their own blockchain as such, but we can bet your bottom dollar (or Bitcoin) that Google have employed a team to heavily investigate the use cases of blockchain technology.

By Adrian Barkley

A Google led blockchain promises to totally change the way blockchain technology exists in the world. Of course, Google have not yet confirmed that they are building their own blockchain as such, but we can bet your bottom dollar (or Bitcoin) that Google have employed a team to heavily investigate the use cases of blockchain technology.

Google are of course behind some of the biggest technological products available in our era, namely Android and the Google Search network. Combined, this pair makes Google one of the most prolific tech giants around. This means notoriety, which in turn means the name of Google gets about a little bit. In fact, you’d struggle to find a person in the western world that hasn’t already heard of Google. So, what does this mean? Well Google is clearly huge, they are a vast company with a truly international reach – this means when they release new products, they don’t have to work very hard to market them. Moreover, because they already have a portfolio of products, they often find ways to link them together, meaning everyone with an android phone (for example) can automatically get access to the latest Google updates (again, for example).

If Google created their own cryptocurrency, called say, Googlecoin, this would be guaranteed instant world adoption, simply because Google itself is already so widely adopted. Moreover, people trust Google, it’s a name that people know and therefore it’s a name that people are happy to buy from. A Googlecoin would be well greeted within the world and this could have significant consequences for the growth of the rest of the cryptocurrency market. When one large coin see’s mass adoption, the entire markets will open up and cryptocurrency all in all will become far bigger than it already is.

The production and development of Googlecoin will ensure that more people start to invest in other cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, XRP and Ethereum too. A Googlecoin would no doubt be tradeable on many exchanges and as a matter of fact, we could also expect Google to build their very own exchange too.

Source: https://cryptodaily.co.uk/2019/05/what-could-googles-blockchain-mean-for-bitcoin

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – The Growing Use Cases of #Blockchain in #Cannabis $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:19 AM on Monday, May 27th, 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 Growing Use Cases of Blockchain in Cannabis

Blockchain might relieve some of the pain felt by marijuana-related enterprises.

By Brian Penny

  • Cannabis is growing the U.S. and Canadian economies as the push for decriminalization moves forward. 
  • Governments are struggling through growing pains with this emerging industry, and blockchain may hold the answer.

In fact, as American industries go, its 250,000+ employees far surpassed the 52,300 coal miners in the USA in 2018. That number is expected to grow to 330,000 by 2022, and cannabis lobbyist group the Marijuana Policy Project reports nearly every state has some sort of pro-marijuana legislation at some stage of approval moving toward the 2020 election.

TruTrace CEO Robert Galarza took some time out from Consensus and Blockchain Week to discuss how his company’s StrainSecure platform is leveraging blockchain to resolve the most pressing issues facing the modern cannabis industry.

The company currently operates in California and Canada, two of the most advanced cannabis cultures in the world. California contains Humboldt County, home to the Emerald Triangle, which is known worldwide as the Aalsmeer Flower Auction of pot. Canada joins Uruguay as the only two sovereign states in the world where cannabis is recreationally legal.

Both governments are struggling through growing pains with this emerging industry, and blockchain may hold the answer.

Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/blockchain-cannabis-use-case/