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ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Major Swiss Stock Exchange SIX to Launch New #Blockchain – Powered Digital Exchange $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 11:16 AM on Thursday, February 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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Major Swiss Stock Exchange SIX to Launch New Blockchain-Powered Digital Exchange

  • Switzerland‘s principal stock exchange SIX Swiss Exchange will test blockchain integration for its forthcoming parallel digital trading platform SDX in the second half of this year.

By Marie Huillet

Switzerland‘s principal stock exchange SIX Swiss Exchange will test blockchain integration for its forthcoming parallel digital trading platform SDX in the second half of this year. The news was reported by Cointelegraph Deutschland Feb. 4.

SIX Swiss Exchange sees roughly 5.19 billion Swiss Francs (CHF) (~$5.18 billion) in daily turnover, and has a market capitalization of over 1.67 trillion CHF ~($1.6 trillion).

CEO Jos Dijsselhof told Cointelegraph Deutschland in an interview that the company had chosen the technology for the time efficiency and improved security it can offer across all stages of stock trading and settlement:

“The fact is, it takes two days for the buyer of a stock to become the owner. The trade itself only takes a fraction of a second, but after that payments have to be settled and titles transferred. If we put it all on our digital exchange, then the whole process takes only a few seconds. This makes the market more efficient, but at the same time also takes risks out of the system. “

Dijsselhof added that wholly digital, blockchain-powered stock trading will not only minimize risks, but widen the range of tradable titles, affirming his ambition that SIX would succeed in building “a whole new stock market on the blockchain with completely integrated trading, handling and custody of digital assets”.

In an interview with Reuters published Feb. 6, SIX exchange chairman Romeo Lacher noted that the exchange aims to finalize a launch date for the new platform in late summer — with the exact date remaining subject to legal and regulatory clarification with Swiss market watchdog the Financial Market Supervisory Authority.

Reuters further reported that SIX expects its blockchain-based SDX digital exchange to supersede its existing marketplace within a decade. Lacher said the company also has plans to launch its own Security Token Offering, which will offer investors an equity stake in exchange for capital.

Unnamed SIX officials told Reuters that SDX will begin by rolling out support selected stocks, followed by bonds, and possibly exchange-traded-funds (ETFs).

As Cointelegraph has previously reported, SIX listed a pioneering multi-crypto-based exchange-traded product (ETP) in November, which tracks five major cryptocurrencies.

Other major global exchanges are similarly looking to rehaul their platforms — in whole or in part — with blockchain. In January, major global securities marketplace Deutsche Börse reported it was “making significant progress” on its blockchain-based securities lending platform, which will use blockchain consortium R3’s Corda technology.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/major-swiss-stock-exchange-six-to-launch-new-blockchain-powered-digital-exchange

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – States Dipping Toes Into #Crypto, #Blockchain $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 3:52 PM on Monday, February 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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States Dipping Toes Into Crypto, Blockchain

  • One month into the new year, state legislatures are dipping their toes into crypto and blockchain.
  • Many of the bills introduced on the issues in 17 states so far call for legislative task forces and joint business-government study groups.

Ted Knutson Contributor 

One month into the new year, state legislatures are dipping their toes into crypto and blockchain.

Many of the bills introduced on the issues in 17 states so far call for legislative task forces and joint business-government study groups.

Legislators appear to show they want their state governments to learn the ins and outs of fintech before they allow crypto and blockchain to live in the everyday regulatory climate as other ways of conducting business.

Chamber of Digital Commerce Chief Policy Officer Amy Davine Kim said she sees momentum.

“Legislators want to show they’re open for blockchain businesses to come in. They want to know what the industry wants. They want to be supportive,” said the digital commerce trade group executive.

She said efforts to advance blockchain and crypto in the State Houses have a non-partisan flavor.

“People on both sides of the aisle have an interest on this,” said Kim.

A toolkit devised for state legislators by the Digital Chamber boasts blockchain has the promise to create extraordinary economic growth and cost efficiencies.

Mary Pfaff, who keeps tabs on the legislative activity for the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, said she has seen a lot of bills to permit the payment of taxes with crypto and to broaden the use of digital currency.

Wyoming legislators have steered their state to the head of the pack.

“They are trying to make Wyoming the center for innovators in the blockchain and crypto space, said the CSBS’s Pfaff.

Last year, they changed the tax code and other Wyoming laws to encourage fintech companies to come in.

This year, there is legislation to place Wyoming as the first state after Arizona to have a light regulatory system in place for fintech startups.

One bill would establish a special bank where blockchain companies could do transactions with digital currency,

National Conference of State Legislatures analyst Heather Morton said there are more bills now than there were this time last year to allow campaign contributions with digital currencies.

She added legislation has also been introduced toauthorize blockchain for corporate records.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/tedknutson/2019/02/04/state-dipping-toes-into-crypto-blockchain/#727d575c131d

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Blockchain Technologists And Finance Veterans Collaborate To Bring Blockchain To Capital Markets $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:15 AM on Thursday, January 31st, 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 Technologists And Finance Veterans Collaborate To Bring Blockchain To Capital Market

  • Bridging old-world and new-world finance is something that blockchain technology has aimed to achieve since bitcoin was first released in January 2009.
  • Ten years later, this is coming to fruition as blockchain-based solutions designed to enable faster, more transparent, peer-to-peer financial transactions are coming to market.

 Rachel Wolfson Contributor

According to Sam Tabar, co-founder of Fluidity, in order for capital markets to evolve, industry veterans need to join forces with blockchain technologists to truly bring blockchain’s fundamental technology to today’s financial markets.  

“If you look at the industry landscape, to date there has not been a comprehensive platform built by blockchain technology professionals and structured finance veterans,” says Tabar.

In order to bridge this gap, Fluidity, a company that provides technology services to registered broker-dealers, issuers and financial institutions for tokenized securities, has joined forces with Propellr, an end-to-end solution for creating, managing, and servicing digitally held assets with an integrated FINRA-registered broker dealer.

Announced today, Propellr and Fluidity have created “Fluidity Factora,” a new, out-of-stealth company that takes complex financial assets, breaks them down into their basic factors, and encodes them to a blockchain. This enables standardization, transparency, and liquidity, making markets more efficient, while reducing the need for middlemen.

The company is unique because it was built by finance and blockchain technology professionals with extensive expertise in their respective fields. The joint team previously published the Two Token Waterfall whitepaper, a liquidity optimized framework for private placement securities.

Propellr is a team of structured finance experts that continues to create institutional grade deals. Factora and AirSwap are an excellent complement of independent platforms, and are uniquely positioned as a full-stack solution to tokenize and trade real-world assets,” says Michael Oved, co-founder of AirSwap. “We’re excited to help push the blockchain world into this forefront: using the fundamental technology of blockchain to revolutionize the industries that need it.”

Simply put, this team takes a new approach to blockchain, mainly by uniting it with structured finance.

Blockchain gives us a tremendous opportunity to make financial information standardized, normalized, and transparent across capital markets,” says Todd Lippiatt, Propellr’s founder and CEO, and co-founder of Fluidity Factora. “We are not trying to become capital raisers, but are focused on building technology with institutional partners in order to establish easily adoptable infrastructure. We’re thrilled to join forces with the minds behind Fluidity.”

Bringing Blockchain Technology With Traditional Capital Markets

In addition to the unique team behind Fluidity Factora, the company’s initial offerings are focused on tokenizing real estate assets. As regulated institutions increasingly move into the blockchain space, tokenizing digital assets is predicted to be a major trend for 2019.

“Tokenizing assets creates a clear, instant, and elegant solution, simplifying complicated industries. Smart contracts lower friction for investors and issuers, making everything replicable and scalable, all while enabling a fluid digital marketplace,” says venture capitalist Bill Tai.

Furthermore, tokenizing assets, such as real estate, could also help solve the problem of illiquidity.

“The private securities market is historically opaque and illiquid; it is on the investor to vet the quality of an investment vehicle, and once committed she/he holds it for the life of the investment. With Factora, incorporating blockchain technology presents the industry with an opportunity to take a significant step forward,” says Lippiatt.

Additionally, trade settlement and servicing are generally bespoke in nature. A blockchain-based solution helps standardize these constructs, ensuring confidence in symmetrical information and transparency.

“The infrastructure behind privately placed securities has barely evolved in 25 years, which is staggering for a constantly evolving market. This team is upgrading the infrastructure in accordance with best practices from both the blockchain and financial industries to create one cohesive framework,” says Donna Redel of the World Economic Forum.

Ultimately, blockchain technology could push forward an industry that has not evolved in a generation, finally creating a true bridge between traditional and new world finance.

Subject to regulatory approval, Propellr is becoming Fluidity Factora.

You can follow Rachel Wolfson on Twitter and LinkedIn to stay up to date on the latest cryptocurrency happenings.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachelwolfson/2019/01/30/blockchain-technologists-and-finance-veterans-collaborate-to-bring-blockchain-to-capital-markets/#73234f9278ce

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #Blockchain Tech and the Energy Industry: More #Decentralization and Greater Efficiency $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:00 AM on Tuesday, January 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 Tech and the Energy Industry: More Decentralization and Greater Efficiency

By Simon Chandler

  • The most exciting use of blockchain in the energy industry — and the one that fits best with the whole ethos of decentralization — comes in the context of microgrids.
  • Even before Bitcoin and blockchain, such grids have been distributed by definition, comprising smaller sources of energy generation (e.g., wind turbines, solar farms) that link together in localized networks in order to provide electricity that isn’t dependent on centralized power plants and utility companies.

The association between blockchains and energy is usually a negative one. “The Bitcoin blockchain is so wasteful of electricity,” or so the argument goes, “that it would push global warming to dangerous levels if it were ever used on a massive scale.” Research published in the influential journal Nature backs up this warning. Yet, if we were to look beyond Bitcoin, it becomes apparent that blockchains in general are being increasingly put to good use by the energy industry.

From their use in energy trades to their incorporation in microgrids, distributed ledgers are making possible a range of new transactions and systems. By enabling micro-suppliers to receive quick and easy payments for contributing electricity to a network, they’re increasing the decentralization of the energy industry, with consumers likely to see their bills become cheaper as a consequence of their entry.

And a similar effect will hopefully be the outcome of allowing energy giants to trade with each other using blockchains, since increases in efficiency and security can hopefully be passed on to consumers in the form of lower energy prices — although there’s always the risk that energy companies will simply take bigger profits for themselves.

Microgrids

The most exciting use of blockchain in the energy industry — and the one that fits best with the whole ethos of decentralization — comes in the context of microgrids. Even before Bitcoin and blockchain, such grids have been distributed by definition, comprising smaller sources of energy generation (e.g., wind turbines, solar farms) that link together in localized networks in order to provide electricity that isn’t dependent on centralized power plants and utility companies.

However, while the microgrid market has been forecasted by Navigant Consulting to grow to around $30 billion by 2030, projected growth has actually stalled in recent years, with Navigant’s research director, Peter Asmus, telling Microgrid Knowledge in August that “the overall spend is declining” relative to predictions made in 2014. Fortunately, blockchain and distributed ledger technology will increasingly help to kickstart the sector’s growth in the coming years, as it offers a number of advantages over alternative ways of delivering microgrids.

For one, the use of blockchain tech promises to increase interoperability between the numerous energy sources, suppliers and customers that make up microgrids. In particular, this is the aim being pursued by the Energy Web Foundation (EWF), an international nonprofit organization that, according to its director of marketing, Peter Bronski, is bringing blockchain tech to all areas of the energy industry.

“EWF is actually building a core blockchain — similar to but importantly distinct from Ethereum — specifically tailored to the energy sector and the industry’s unique regulatory, operational, and market needs: the Energy Web Chain,” he tells Cointelegraph.

“It’ll come as no surprise, I suspect, that blockchain offers significant cybersecurity and decentralization benefits to the energy sector. Globally, the energy sector is amidst a fundamental transition from a centralized electricity grid with a relatively small number of very large power plants to a decentralized, low-carbon electricity grid with billions of connected devices such as rooftop solar panels, batteries, smart thermostats, electric vehicles, etc. Blockchain, and especially the Energy Web Chain, is very well suited to helping managing that future grid.”

Already released in beta and expecting its genesis block in the second quarter of 2019, one of the advantages offered to microgrids by the Energy Web Chain is the ability to use smart contracts to efficiently monitor the production and distribution of (renewable) energy. “For example, whenever a large-scale renewable energy generator such as wind farm or solar farm generates a megawatt-hour of clean electricity, that can trigger the generation of a renewable energy certificate (REC),” Bronski explains. “The creation and ownership tracking of RECs is a great use case for blockchain technology.”

It’s a testament to the promise shown by EWF and its Energy Web Chain that a number of big corporations have already signed up to use and partner with the platform. In November, Siemens joined EWF as a member, while the foundation also counts the likes of Shell, E.On, Centrica, Engine and Iberdrola as affiliates. And as Stefan Jessenberger at Siemens Digital Grid explains to Cointelegraph, blockchain won’t simply enable greater security and efficiency, but also the possibility for changing how energy companies and producers operate:

“In our view, the blockchain technology might revolutionize the way DERs [distributed energy resources], grid operators and marketplaces will interact in a secure, efficient and transparent way while also enabling new business models. Especially in combination with artificial intelligence, advanced forecasting algorithms and the usage of geographical information of the assets, the technology offers promising capabilities in order to enable the autonomous trading of energy and flexibility, while incorporating the locational value of DER’s and loads.”

In addition to heightened efficiency and transparency, a key ingredient in the creation of new business models is blockchain’s ability to enable small producers of energy to be paid quickly for their contributions to grids.

For example, in September, Australian company Vicinity Centres announced that it would begin using a blockchain-based delivery platform for the small energy networks it runs in shopping malls throughout Australia. This platform has been built by Power Ledger, and it will enable Vicinity’s malls to sell energy to nearby residents and consumers. And to do this, the platform will make use of its native Sparkz token, an ERC-20 token which enables producers and customers to engage in “frictionless” trades with each other without having to rely on intermediaries.

Trading energy

Aside from offering a secure record of transactions and also rewards for producers, blockchain tech is set to serve the energy industry in other ways. One of its most significant uses will be in the area of energy markets, where oil, gas, coal and other sources of energy are traded between producers, distributors and financial institutions.

It’s here that Vakt operates, having established itself in June 2018 with the aim of creating a “post-trade processing platform” for any kind of tradable commodity, including energy. In November, it launched its first usable platform, which will, for the time being, allow for the recording of trades in oil, but which Vakt plans to expand to “all physically traded energy commodities.”

For a company that has only just launched its first product, Vakt boasts some high-profile users — including BP, Shell, Equinor, Gunvor and Mercuria — which will all use Vakt’s platform in parallel with their internal systems for recording trades. The post-trade platform will run on J.P. Morgan‘s Quorum blockchain, which is essentially a permissioned version of Ethereum that allows for private — as well as public — smart contracts and also for zero-knowledge proofs. This makes it convenient for any enterprise that doesn’t want to broadcast the value of its purchases and trade deals to the world, while Vakt itself advertises that its platform will offer up to “40% savings across operations” as a result of putting details on a shared ledger.

Speaking at the time of the launch, Shell’s executive vice president of trading and supply, Andrew Smith, explained in broad terms what he expects blockchain tech to bring to the industry.

“Digitalisation is changing how the energy value chain works. It’s an exciting time. Collaboration with our peers and some of the industry’s key players is the best way to combine market expertise and achieve the scale necessary to launch a digital transaction platform that could transform the way we all do business. Ultimately the aim is improved speed and security, which benefits everyone along the supply chain from market participants to customers.”

Something very similar to Vakt is being built by Komgo, a Switzerland-based alliance of “fifteen of the world’s largest banking and commodity companies,” according to an article published on the organization’s own website in October. What’s interesting is that Komgo includes some of the same companies as Vakt (e.g., Shell, Gunvor, Mercuria), suggesting that the energy industry is very interested in having some kind of blockchain-based system for the processing of energy commodity trades — and is currently trialling more than one in an effort to see which one works best. The fact that it will be working with ConsenSys — which builds apps and platforms based around Ethereum — indicates that it’s drawing on plenty of pre-existing knowledge of blockchain architecture.

Challenges

But as promising as blockchain tech seems for the energy industry, there are, as ever, a number of challenges that have to be overcome before distributed ledgers become an integral part of the sector.

“First, technical challenges have to be solved, e. g. scalability, interoperability, energy efficiency,” says Stefan Jessenberger. “Second, the regulatory and legal frameworks in relevant markets have to be adapted in order to make full use of the potential efficiency gains provided by […] future blockchain based energy systems.”

From the technical side of things, scalability is the biggest issue here, although the platforms surveyed above all believe they’re well on their way to producing workable solutions.

“EWF and our 90+ Affiliates are actively designing solutions into the Energy Web Chain to address known variables that we believe will be important for broad adoption across the energy sector,” explains EWF’s Peter Bronski. “A few examples: a) We’re using a Proof-of-Authority-based approach to consensus, because we believe that degree of validator oversight will be important, especially to regulators, in the highly regulated energy sector. b) At the same time that the Energy Web Chain is an open-source, public blockchain, we’re also building in features that can keep sensitive information private, so that only approved actors can access confidential data.”

It may not be immediately obvious as to how a proof-of-authority (PoA) consensus mechanism and privacy options improve scalability. However, because PoA avoids the intensive cryptographic computations of proof-of-work (PoW), any chain using it can thereby reach greater capacities. Similarly, the permissioned aspect of the Energy Web Chain means that not all information produced by the chain will be broadcast to every participant, a feature that once again avoids a considerable amount of excess computation.

And while these specific features are being implemented by only one blockchain, most other energy-related platforms are similarly circumventing PoW in order to achieve more scalable results. So even if blockchain-based energy networks still have a way to go before they enjoy widespread use, they look increasingly prepared to handle such use.

source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/blockchain-tech-and-the-energy-industry-more-decentralization-and-greater-efficiency

INTERVIEW: Legendary Financier Sheldon Inwentash $IDK.ca Provides Insight into #Marijuana, #Blockchain and #Resource Sector

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 1:47 PM on Saturday, January 26th, 2019

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – MIT Professor: Blockchain Can Allow for More Inclusive, Borderless Economy $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:13 AM on Tuesday, January 22nd, 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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MIT Professor: Blockchain Can Allow for More Inclusive, Borderless Economy

  • “Only a true decentralized system, where the power is really so spread that is going to be essentially practically impossible to attack them all and when you don’t need to trust this or that particular node, is going to bring actually the security we really need and deserve.”

By Helen Partz

Blockchain can allow for the creation of a borderless economy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) professor Silvio Micali claimed in a interview on Bloomberg’s Daybreak Asia, Jan. 21.

Speaking on the show, Micali outlined three major properties of blockchain systems that must function simultaneously to enable a more inclusive and borderless economy — security, decentralization and scalability. According to MIT’s Ford Professor of Engineering, until recently, only two of those three basic properties could have been achieved simultaneously at any time.

When asked about scalability in particular, Micali stressed that a decentralized system really needs superior technology to provide the same level of participation and confidence that is enjoyed by centralized systems.

When asked about security breaches in blockchain systems, Micali stated that centralized systems are far more vulnerable to hacking attempts, pointing to the frequency of security and privacy breaches that repeatedly take place among centralized institution of various sorts.

The professor expressed optimism about blockchain in terms of security, noting the level of security built into the concept of a trustless system:

“Only a true decentralized system, where the power is really so spread that is going to be essentially practically impossible to attack them all and when you don’t need to trust this or that particular node, is going to bring actually the security we really need and deserve.”

Recently, a group of major United States universities, including MIT, Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley, announced the launch of Unit-e, a cryptocurrency project touted as a “globally scalable decentralized payments network.”

Earlier in January, MIT Technology Review issued an article claiming that 2019 will become the year when blockchain technology finally becomes normalized.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/mit-professor-blockchain-can-allow-for-more-inclusive-borderless-economy

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Why is $1 Billion Bitcoin Giant Bitfury Building a Blockchain Music Service? $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 8:54 AM on Monday, January 21st, 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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  • An early bitcoin mining firm turned global blockchain company based out of London, has announced that it will launch an entertainment division tasked with developing an open-source music platform that runs on blockchain technology.

By CCN.com: The Bitfury Group, an early bitcoin mining firm turned global blockchain company based out of London, has announced that it will launch an entertainment division tasked with developing an open-source music platform that runs on blockchain technology.

From Mining Bitcoin to Tracking Music IP on a Blockchain

Tech companies trying to make waves in the music industry is nothing new. Bitfury is a significant player in the blockchain industry, however, which makes this foray particularly interesting. The aim of decentralizing the music industry has long been a pipedream but could now be closer to reality.

The open-source platform, labeled SurroundTM, will purportedly simplify the safe transferal of copyright assets. At the very core of the project is the creation of an environment that allows musicians to manage their affairs far more efficiently. This includes monitoring their output, being able to see what works, and — most importantly — what doesn’t. According to Bitfury, SurroundTM will lead the way in promoting innovation within the music industry.

Bitfury wants to be more than just a bitcoin mining company. | Source: Shutterstock

Speaking to Reuters, Bitfury Surround CEO Stefan Schulz commented:

There is a very strong momentum for an open entertainment-related blockchain where market participants themselves would be participating in the market venue, not only from a transactional point of view.

The platform itself will look to provide a digital system for both monetizing and sharing intellectual property. Based out of Europe with a presence in Amsterdam and Berlin, offices in Tokyo, LA, Moscow, and Seoul are set to follow. Schulz, a veteran of the entertainment and music industry, said that although “the actual platform is being put together and developed as we speak,” it wouldn’t be near completion for quite a while.

Bitfury isn’t the only major firm to eye blockchain as a solution to copyright management. Via a licensing agreement, Kodak‘s blockchain platform also offers photographers the ability to register their images and secure their intellectual property.

Bitfury Becomes Bitcoin Mining’s Latest Unicorn

Recently valued at $1 billion, The Bitfury Group raised $80 million from investors late last year, including Mike Novogratz-led merchant bank Galaxy Digital. The former Fortress Investment Group hedge fund manager’s contribution helped push Bitfury’s valuation into the “blockchain unicorn” category inhabited by firms such as Bitmain, Coinbase, and Circle.

Source: https://www.ccn.com/why-is-1-billion-bitcoin-giant-bitfury-building-a-blockchain-music-service/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #UPS Unveils Equity Investment and Partnership With #Blockchain B2B Firm #Inxeption $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 10:13 AM on Thursday, January 17th, 2019

William Suberg

The investment arm of logistics giant UPS has made an undisclosed equity investment in United States enterprise blockchain company Inxeption, the firm confirmed in a press release Jan 16.

Inxeption, which began operations in 2017, aims to use blockchain technology to improve various processes for businesses, including product design, manufacturing and supply chain management.

Neither party has revealed the scope of the deal, which will reportedly see Inxeption and the UPS Strategic Enterprise Fund work in tandem in future to develop new features for Inxeption’s platform.

“Business customers need secure platforms that protect their customer data and proprietary information, while making it easy for them to interact and even collaborate more effectively with their customers,” Inxeption CEO and co-founder Farzad Dibachi commented in the press release.

Describing its product as an e-commerce platform for the B2B market, Inxeption joins a steadily increasing pool of blockchain initiatives focused on using distributed technology to make complex corporate systems more transparent.

UPS CMO Kevin Warren stated in the press release that “Inxeption’s technology is attractive to UPS because it helps unlock new efficiencies for customers using B2B e-commerce platforms.”

Supply chains have proved a particular area of interest amongst firms developing blockchain solutions in 2019. Several blockchain-based supply chain projects have been announced in the past week alone, as diverse as cobalt supplies and food for the upcoming World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos.

The Inxeption partnership reveals UPS’ belief in blockchain’s potential, despite cautionary words from a senior executive last month that forecast little impact from the technology in 2019.

“We have a small team looking at blockchain, but we are still searching for the killer use case,” the company’s executive vice president of technology and chief digital officer Linda Jojo told mainstream media in December.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/ups-unveils-equity-investment-and-partnership-with-blockchain-b2b-firm-inxeption

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – #HSBC suggests it might have found a… use for #blockchain? $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:59 AM on Tuesday, January 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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HSBC suggests it might have found a… use for blockchain?

  • HSBC claims to have settled three million foreign exchange (FX) transactions and made payments worth $250,000 using distributed ledger technology (DLT).
  • The bank said it had made “significant efficiencies” while using its DLT product, HSBC FX Everywhere, for the past year – suggesting the risk-averse financial sector is treating blockchain technology as a legitimate biz tool.

Says it used tech to settle 3 million forex transactions, $250k in payments last year

HSBC claims to have settled three million foreign exchange (FX) transactions and made payments worth $250,000 using distributed ledger technology (DLT).

The bank said it had made “significant efficiencies” while using its DLT product, HSBC FX Everywhere, for the past year – suggesting the risk-averse financial sector is treating blockchain technology as a legitimate biz tool.

In a statement, the bank revealed it had been using a share-permissioned ledger for payments on its internal balance sheets. “It transforms the process around intra-company foreign exchange activity, automating several manual procedures and reducing reliance on external settlement networks.”

The DLT was used for 3 million FX transactions and 150,000 payments, which HSBC admitted was a small proportion when compared with traditional processes.

The much-hyped technology has long been criticised by observers who see it as a solution in search of a problem, as over-eager vendors stick the buzzword on everything they can.

A recent study of its use in the international development sector found no evidence of success – rather just “a proliferation of press releases, white papers, and persuasively written articles”.

Up until now, the most common example of a practical use of blockchain – where it was being used to solve a problem in a way other tech couldn’t – has been in supply chain management, although such deployments haven’t been a raging success for a variety of reasons.

HSBC’s announcement, which discusses three main benefits for its use in FX trading, is also notable because risk-averse financial institutions are typically regarded as being less keen on untested emerging technologies.

But the bank’s interim global head of FX and commodities, Richard Bibbey, said that it was now looking into using DLT to help multinational clients with multiple treasury centres and cross-border supply chains to “better manage foreign exchange flows within their organisations”.

In listing the benefits, HSBC said the singularity, transparency and immutability provided by DLT created a “shared, single version of the truth of intra-company trades” from execution to settlement, reducing “risk of discrepancy and delay”.

Meanwhile, confirmation and settlement can be automated by matching and netting transactions – reducing costs and reliance on external settlement network – and a consolidated, global view of cash flows and certainty of funds “supports greater balance sheet optimisation”. ®

Source: https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/01/15/hsbc_blockchain_forex/

ThreeD Capital Inc. $IDK.ca – Blockchain: New Frontiers $HIVE.ca $BLOC.ca $CODE.ca

Posted by AGORACOM-JC at 9:07 AM on Monday, January 14th, 2019

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Blockchain: New Frontiers

  • Blockchain is a technology that offers reliable transactions thanks to decentralized record-keeping.
  • The best-known applications of “blockchain” technology are still the alternative currencies, of which Bitcoin remains the most prominent.
  • But it looks more and more as if the main near-term expansions of the blockchain technology are not going to be about currencies, but instead relate to other kinds of ownership, transactions, and record-keeping.

Timothy Taylor

Blockchain is a technology that offers reliable transactions thanks to decentralized record-keeping. The best-known applications of “blockchain” technology are still the alternative currencies, of which Bitcoin remains the most prominent. But it looks more and more as if the main near-term expansions of the blockchain technology are not going to be about currencies, but instead relate to other kinds of ownership, transactions, and record-keeping. A couple of recent studies emphasizing this theme are “How blockchain technology could change our lives,” written by Philip Boucher, Susana Nascimento, and Mihalis Kritikos for the European Parliamentary Research Service (February 2017), and “Blockchain and Economic Development: Hype vs. Reality,” written by Michael Pisa and Matt Juden for the Center for Global Development (CGD Policy Paper #107, July 2017).

Both papers offer a verbal and intuitive sketch of how the blockchain technology works. Here’s a taste of the explanation from Boucher, Nascimento and Kritikos:

“Blockchain offers the same record-keeping functionality but without a centralised architecture. The question is how it can be certain that a transaction is legitimate when there is no central authority to check it. Blockchains solve this problem by decentralising the ledger, so that each user holds a copy of it. Anyone can request that any transaction be added to the blockchain, but transactions are only accepted if all the users agree that it is legitimate, e.g. that the request comes from the authorised person, that the house seller has not already sold the house, and the buyer has not already spent the money. This checking is done reliably and automatically on behalf of each user, creating a very fast and secure ledger system that is remarkably tamper-proof. Each new transaction to be recorded is bundled together with other new transactions into a ‘block’, which is added as the latest link on a long ‘chain’ of historic transactions. This chain forms the blockchain ledger that is held by all users. …”

Thus, anyone can download the blockchain of all transactions. But who has an incentive to update and check the blockchain? Blockchain technology relies on “miners” to do this job. Miners need to spend computing resources to solve a complicated algorithm before they can add a block of transactions to the blockchain, and they are paid either by users of blockchain services or by the system itself. Again, Boucher, Nascimento and Kritikos explain:

“This work is called ‘mining’. Anybody can become a miner and compete to be the first to solve the complex mathematical problem of creating a valid encrypted block of transactions to add to the blockchain. There are various means of incentivising people to do this work. Most often, the first miner to create a valid block and add it to the chain is rewarded with the sum of fees for its transactions. Fees are currently around €0.10 per transaction, but blocks are added regularly and contain thousands of transactions. Miners may also receive new currency that is created and put into circulation as an inflation mechanism.

“Adding a new block to the chain means updating the ledger that is held by all users. Users only accept a new block when it has been verified that all of its transactions are valid. If a discrepancy is found, the block is rejected. Otherwise, the block is added and will remain there as a permanent public record. No user can remove it. While destroying or corrupting a traditional ledger requires an attack on the middleman, doing so with a blockchain requires an attack on every copy of the ledger simultaneously. There can be no ‘fake ledger’ because all users have their own genuine version to check against. Trust and control in blockchain-based transactions is not centralised and black-boxed, but decentralised and transparent. These blockchains are described as ‘permissionless’, because there is no special authority that can deny permission to participate in the checking and adding of transactions.” 

When blockchain is used for Bitcoin, the blockchain records the ownership of each bitcoin, and when each bitcoin is transferred to another user. But the users themselves remain (although sufficiently motivated law enforcement can sometimes find a way in). Bitcoin has been in the news lately because it has been experiencing a price spike. 

This recent spike, while it certainly gladdens the heart of those who already hold bitcoins, is actually part of the reason why bitcoin is not an especially good currency. Useful currencies are relatively stable in value! In most modern economies, traditional currencies typically allow transactions that are already relatively fast, secure, and cheap. For most people, it’s not clear how they would benefit from using bitcoin for transaction purposes. Pisa and Juden explain (footnotes and citations omitted):

To usurp the role of national currencies, bitcoin would first need to fulfill some (though perhaps not all) of the core functions that money provides, including serving as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value. Currently, bitcoin does none of these things very well: its extreme volatility prevents it from being a good store of value and unit of account, and retailers and consumers—who appear satisfied with the cost/benefit tradeoffs associated with using credit cards—have not accepted the currency widely enough to consider it a reliable medium of exchange. National governments also present an obstacle:  currently, no government allows taxes to be paid with bitcoin, which reduces the incentives for individuals and companies to use it.

“Even if national governments choose not to resist broader usage of bitcoin, there are questions about the technology’s ability to scale due to the speed of the network. Currently, the Bitcoin blockchain can process a maximum of seven transactions per second. To put this in context, Visa processes an average of 2,000 transactions per second and has a peak capacity of 56,000 transactions per second. Increasing the speed of the Bitcoin network could be accomplished through increasing block size. This is technically feasible, but some network participants have resisted it, since it would increase the cost of mining bitcoin and give more control to larger entities, leading to greater centralization of the network. Finally, there are concerns about the energy intensity of mining. Although estimates vary widely, some indicate that bitcoin mining could consume 14,000 megawatts of electricity by 2020, which is comparable to Denmark’s total energy consumption.”

But although bitcoin and virtual currencies may not be likely to take over the money supply anytime soon, the blockchain technology can be adapted for a considerable array of other purposes. Here are some suggestions about these other purposes.

Ownership of Digital Media (as explained by Boucher, Nascimento, and Kritikos)

“When consumers purchase books and discs, they come to own physical artefacts that they can later sell, give away or leave as part of their inheritance. There are limitations to their rights, for example they should not distribute copies, and should pay royalties if they broadcast the content. In buying the digital equivalent of this same media, consumers know they will not gain ownership of a physical artefact, but many do not realise that they do not gain ownership of any content either. Rather, they enter into a licensing agreement which is valid for either a period of time or a fixed number of plays. These licences cannot be sold, given away or even left as part of an inheritance. Building a collection of legitimately-owned digital music, literature, games and films often comes at a cost similar to that of a collection of various discs and books with the same content. It is a substantial lifelong investment but one that cannot be transferred and that expires on death. While older generations might take pleasure in reliving the tastes and experiences of loved ones via the boxes of vinyl, books and games they left behind, today’s children may not enjoy the same access to their parent’s digital content. Could blockchain technology help resolve these and other problems with digital media? … 

“The blockchain could be used to register all sales, loans, donations and other such transfers of individual digital artefacts. All transactions are witnessed and agreed by all users. Just like transactions in a bank account or land registry, artefacts cannot be transferred unless they are legitimately owned. Buyers can verify that they are purchasing legitimate copies of MP3s and video files. Indeed, the transaction history allows anyone to verify that the various transfers of ownership lead all the way back to the original owner, that is, the creator of the work. The concept could be combined with smart contracts so that access to content can be lent to others for fixed periods before being automatically returned, or so that inheritance wishes could be implemented automatically upon registration of a death certificate. … Using blockchain technology in this way could for the first time enable consumers to buy and sell digital copies second hand, give them away or donate them to charity shops, lend them to friends temporarily or leave them as part of an inheritance – just as they used to with vinyl and books – while ensuring that they are not propagating multiple unlicensed copies.”

Management of Global Supply Chains (as explained by Boucher, Nascimento, and Kritikos)

“Blockchain-based applications have the potential to improve supply chains by providing infrastructure for registering, certifying and tracking at a low cost goods being transferred between often distant parties, who are connected via a supply chain but do not necessarily trust each other. All goods are uniquely identified via ‘tokens’ and can then be transferred via the blockchain, with each transaction verified and time-stamped in an encrypted but transparent process. This gives the relevant parties access whether they are suppliers, vendors, transporters or buyers. The terms of every transaction remain irrevocable and immutable, open to inspection to everyone or to authorised auditors. Smart contracts could also be deployed to automatically execute payments and other procedures.

“Several companies, innovators and incumbents are already testing blockchain for record-keeping in their supply chains. Everledger enables companies and buyers to track the provenance of diamonds from mines to jewellery stores and to combat insurance or documentation fraud. For each diamond, Everledger measures 40 attributes such as cut and clarity, the number of degrees in pavilion angles and place of origin. They generate a serial number for each diamond, inscribed microscopically, and then they add this digital ID to Everledger’s blockchain (currently numbering 280 000 diamonds). This makes it possible to establish and maintain complete ownership histories, which can help counteract fraud and support police and insurance investigators tracking stolen gems. It also allows consumers to make more informed purchasing decisions, e.g. to limit their search to diamonds with a ‘clean’ history that is free from fraud, theft, forced labour and the intervention of dubious vendors who are linked to violence, drugs or arms trafficking. …

Wal-Mart, the world’s largest retailer, is trialling Blockchain for food safety. It is expected that a Blockchain-based accurate and updated record can help to identify the product, shipment and vendor, for instance when an outbreak happens, and in this way get the details on how and where food was grown and who inspected it. An accurate record could also make their supply chain more efficient when it comes to delivering food to stores faster and reducing spoilage and waste.

International Financial Transactions (as explained by Pisa and Juden)

“The cost and inefficiency associated with making international payments across certain corridors present a barrier to economic development. Whether it is a business making an investment in a developing country, an emigrant sending money back home, or an aid organization funding a project abroad, moving resources from rich to poorer countries ultimately requires money to be sent across borders. … [C]onducting  these transactions through the formal financial system can involve considerable cost and delay. Cross-border payments are inefficient because there is no single global payment infrastructure through which they can travel. Instead, international payments must pass through a series of bilateral correspondent bank relationships, in which banks hold accounts at other banks in other countries. The number of such relationships that a bank is willing to maintain is limited by the cost of funding these accounts as well as the risk of conducting financial transactions with banks who lack strong controls to prevent illicit transactions … 

“One consequence of the fragmented global payments system is the high cost of remittances, which are an enormously important source of development financing. Roughly $430 billion of remittances were sent to developing countries in 2016, nearly three times as much as  official aid. The global average cost of sending remittances worth $200 is 7.4 percent but varies greatly  across corridors: for example, the average cost of sending $200 from a developed country to South Asia is 5.4 percent, while the cost of sending the same value to sub-Saharan Africa is 9.8 percent (World Bank 2017).  …

Small and medium-sized businesses face similar costs when conducting cross-border payments. Industry surveys suggest that approximately two-thirds of cross-border businesses are unhappy with the delays and fees associated with using traditional bank transfers for sending international payments …

“Using a bitcoin-based company to send remittances to countries that have deep bitcoin exchange markets can be cheaper than using traditional MTOs. For example, sending a $200 remittance from the United States to the Philippines with Rebit.ph currently costs 3 percent, while World Remit, an established MTO that relies on the traditional system of bank wires, charges 3.5 percent. However, in most corridors, bitcoin-based remittance companies have not been able to offer fees that are substantially lower than traditional players. As a result, many have closed, while others have shifted to emphasizing business-to-business payments …”  

Public record-keeping and land registries (from both sets of authors)

Boucher, Nascimento, and Kritikos write:

“The most immediate applications of blockchain technology in public administrations are in record keeping. The combination of time-stamping with digital signatures on an accessible ledger is expected to deliver benefits for all users, enabling them to conduct transactions and create records (e.g. for land registries, birth certificates and business licences) with less dependence upon lawyers, notaries, government officials and other third parties. …

“The Estonian government has experimented with blockchain implementations enabling citizens to use their ID cards to order medical prescriptions, vote, bank, apply for benefits, register their businesses, pay taxes and access approximately 3 000 other digital services. The approach also enables civil servants to encrypt documents, review and approve permits, contracts and applications and submit information requests to other services. This is an example of a permissioned blockchain, where some access is restricted in order to secure data and protect users’ privacy. … 

“Several countries including Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria have begun to use blockchains to manage land registries. Their aim is to create a clear and trustworthy record of ownership, in response to problems with registration, corruption and poor levels of public access to records. Sweden is also conducting tests to put real estate transactions on blockchain, in this case to allow all parties (banks, government, brokers, buyers and sellers) to track the progress of the transaction deal in all its stages and to guarantee the authenticity and transparency of the process while making considerable time and cost savings.

“The Department for Work and Pensions in the UK have also trialled the use of blockchain technology for welfare payments. Here, citizens use their phones to receive and spend their benefit payments and, with their consent, their transactions are recorded on a distributed ledger. The aim of the initiative is to help people manage their finances and create a more secure and efficient welfare system, preventing fraud and enhancing trust between claimants and the government. The UK government is also considering how blockchain technology could enable citizens to track the allocation and spending of funds from the government, donors or aid organisations to the actual recipients, in the form of grants, loans and scholarships.”

Pisa and Juden write:

“The idea of storing land titles on a blockchain has obvious appeal. Most importantly, sharing a land registry across a distributed network greatly enhances its security by eliminating “single point of failure” risk and making it more difficult to tamper with records. It could also increase transparency by allowing certified actors (including, potentially, auditors or mon-profit organizations) to monitor changes made to the registry on a near real-time basis, and enhance efficiency by reducing the time and money associated with registering property. …

“A blockchain cannot, however, address problems related to the reliability of records. This is an obvious point but one that is often overlooked. As noted earlier, the blockchain is a “garbage in, garbage out” system: if a government uploads a false deed to a blockchain (either out of carelessness or deceit), it will remain false. This suggests that using the technology to store land records works best in places where the existing system for recording land titles is already strong. This was certainly the case in Georgia, which initiated a project with The Bitfury Group and the Blockchain Trust Accelerator in 2016 to register land titles on a blockchain. … Bitfury’s pilot project in Georgia has reportedly been a success. By February 2017, NAPR had registered more than 100,000 documents and the Georgian government announced a new agreement with Bitfury to expand the use of blockchain technology to other government departments. The question now is whether this success can be replicated in less favorable environments. Bitfury will face this challenge in Ukraine where it recently reached agreement with the Ukrainian government to put all its electronic records (not just land titles) onto a blockchain.”

Private and Validated Proof of Identity (as explained by Pisa and Juden, citations and footnotes omitted)

A number of countries have recently enacted digital identification systems for their citizens, including most notably India, but also Estonia, Pakistan, Peru, and Thailand. However, these are not blockchain systems, but rather a combination of ID numbers, biometric markers (like fingerprints or iris scans), and cryptography (where a person needs to know a private code). Governments are not likely to outsource the identification of their citizens to blockchain technology. The question is whether it might be useful to use blockchain to provide a private proof of identification that people might use for other purposes, alongside their government ID, while having greater control over their private information. The authors explain:

“Because of the weaknesses of centralized and federated ID solutions, and the belief that people should have greater control over their own personal data and the value derived from it, some ID experts have turned their focus to developing “user-centric” or “self-sovereign” systems. These systems aim to shift control to individuals by allowing them to “store their own identity data on their own devices, and provide it efficiently to those who need to validate it, without relying on a central repository of identity data.” Until recently such a solution seemed technically infeasible, but blockchain technology appears to make it possible.

“Several benefits arise from storing certified attributes on a blockchain. The first is privacy: Alice can control both who she shares her personal information with and how much information she shares. The second is security, as the absence of a centralized database eliminates single point of failure risk. The system is also more convenient, since it allows users to provide verified information with the touch of a button rather than having to access and submit a wide variety of documents. Finally, a blockchain provides an easy and accurate way to trace the evolution of ID attributes since each change is time-stamped and appended to the record preceding it.

“The idea of a self-sovereign ID system based on blockchain is close to becoming a reality. For example, SecureKey and IBM are now piloting a digital ID system in Canada using the Linux Foundation’s open-source Hyperledger Fabric blockchain. The project connects the Canadian government (including national and provincial government agencies) with the country’s largest banks and telecoms on a permissioned blockchain network. These participating companies and agencies play a dual role of certifying users’ attributes and providing digital services. The project is expected to go live in late 2017, at  which time Canadian consumers will be able to opt into the network to access a variety of egovernment and financial services by sharing verified attributes stored on a mobile phone.”

Transparency and Coordination of Financial Aid (as described by Pisa and Juden)

“An example of the first model is an application called Stoneblock developed by the company Neocapita. Still in an early stage of development, the platform will allow actors along the development supply chain (including donors, recipients, implementing partners, and auditors) to simultaneously track information about how a project is progressing and the flow of funding. The company is also exploring the use of smart contracts that would trigger disbursement of funds tied to performance metrics. In most cases, human observers would report metrics onto a blockchain (e.g., reporting the number of children attending a school) but in others, electronic meters could play the same role (e.g., measuring the amount of water produced by a well). By allowing all participants on the network to view the same information at the same time, using a blockchain to share project data could dramatically reduce administrative overhead. Storing records on a blockchain would also make them essentially tamper-proof, thereby reducing the potential for misappropriation.”

These papers include other possible applications: blockchain-enabled records of when a patent application occurred; blockchain-enabled voting; “smart contracts,” which might involve provisions for payments related to in loans, insurance payments, or wills that can be automatically carried out when prespecified dates or conditions occur; and even talk of setting up “decentralized autonomous organizations” on blockchain that would own assets and could carry out a set of contractual commitments with humans, firms, and other autonomous organizations. The alternative currencies like bitcoin get the headlines, but my guess is that these alternative frontiers for the application of blockchain technology are going to be considerably more important very soon — if they aren’t more important already.

Source: https://www.bbntimes.com/en/global-economy/blockchain-new-frontiers