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  • user 7:36 am on May 28, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , bitcoin, ,   

    Five Myths About the Blockchain Revolution 

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAexAAAAJGI0MjQ0YTBkLWIwMmQtNGIxZi1iODFhLTM3NDMzZjBjNjliOQBy Don Tapscott and Alex Tapscott, co-authors, Revolution.

    Blockchain is the most important invention in computing in a generation because, for the first time in human history, we have at our disposal a truly native digital medium for peer-to-peer value exchange. Blockchain, a vast global platform based on a distributed ledger, establishes the rules — in the form of computations and heavy duty encryption — that enable two or more parties to transact or do business without needing a third party to establish trust.

    Rather than relying on a bank, government or other intermediary to create trust, the blockchain ensures it through mass collaboration and clever code. Trust is built into the system, which is why we call blockchain the Trust Protocol.

    Taken one step further, the blockchain also acts as a ledger of accounts, a database, a notary, a sentry, and clearing house, all by consensus. We believe it is the second generation of the Internet and holds the potential to rewire the economic power grid and shake up the old order of things for the better.

    Here are the five main myths about blockchains:

    (Read an excerpt of our book, Blockchain Revolution, here.)

    1. Blockchain good, bad

    Many people, especially those in the financial services industry, are excited about the potential of blockchain technology but believe that digital currencies like bitcoin are unfeasible, undesirable or even dangerous.

    Whereas the bitcoin blockchain is entirely permissionless — that is, anyone can access it via an Internet-enabled device and interact with it like they would the open Internet — permissioned blockchains require users to have certain credentials, like a license to operate on that particular blockchain, granted by the members or some governing body. Permissioned blockchains use distributed ledger technology without having a digital currency attached.

    At first blush, these private and permissioned blockchains appear to have a few clear advantages. For one, members can easily change the rules if they so desire, as they only need to get their small group to agree to a change, rather than convincing a huge network of people. Costs can be kept down, as transactions only need validation from the members themselves, not a network of millions of participants. This streamlining could reduce electricity usage too, which is good for the environment. Regulators might also prefer them over public blockchains, like the bitcoin blockchain, because they need not be anonymous or pseudonymous.

    But not so fast. The easier it is to change the rules, the easier it is to flaunt them. Intentionally limiting certain freedoms or access can inhibit neutrality. With no open value innovation, the technology is more likely to stagnate and become vulnerable. Further blockchains tied to a digital currency like bitcoin have a built-in system to incentivize people to do the work necessary to validate transactions.

    2. The main opportunity for blockchains is in the financial services industry.

    The financial services industry can transform itself around blockchain technology, if it can find the leadership to do it. The technology holds great promise to revolutionize the industry — from to credit card networks and everything in between. When everyone shares the same public, distributed ledger, settlements occur instantly for all to see. Banks could speed up the metabolism of the system, and cut out massive costs. The smartest incumbents will use blockchain technology strategically, including permissionless systems to penetrate new markets like the unbanked and bring new services to market.

    Yet financial services are the tip of the iceberg.

    Blockchains can disrupt the disrupters like Uber. They will be at the heart of the Internet of Things — animating the physical world by, for example, allowing smart devices to contract, transact and securely share data peer-to-peer through blockchains.

    They can reinvent democracy by making politicians accountable to citizens through smart contract. Imagine if a politician only received her salary or an appropriation for a project after fulfilling pre-set objectives laid bare in that smart contract. She would be beholden to the people, not powerful interests or donors.

    3. Blockchains are really a B2B thing. They won’t affect me personally.

    We’re convinced that this technology will change our economy, our institutions and day-to-day life in more dramatic ways than the first era of the Internet.

    These are but a few ways blockchain will help you.

    The list goes on.

    4. Blockchains have too many problems for them to be feasible.

    Some say the technology is not ready for prime time; that it’s still hard to use, and that the killer applications are still nascent. Other critics point to the massive amount of energy needed to reach consensus in the network: What happens when thousands or perhaps millions of interconnected blockchains are each processing billions of transactions a day? Are the incentives great enough for people to participate and behave safely over time, and not try to overpower the network? Is blockchain technology the worst job killer ever?

    Our research suggests such concerns should not go into a category called “Reasons why this is a bad idea” but rather into a category called “Implementation challenges.”

    5. Craig Wright is Satoshi Nakamoto

    Early this month, Australian entrepreneur Craig Wright claimed to be the pseudonymous creator of bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto.

    We know for a fact that he is not the sole creator. The reason? We — Don Tapscott and Alex Tapscott — are among those who created bitcoin.

    Let us explain. Whomever wrote the original bitcoin paper and protocol got things off the ground. Then he (or she) disappeared, leaving it to an ever-growing community to carry on. This community is now responsible for the vast majority of code and other content related to bitcoin. In that sense, we are all Satoshi.

    Which is why it doesn’t really matter who wrote the original paper. In other open source communities, such as Linux, there is an ultimate arbitrator. Bitcoin, and for that matter all permissionless blockchains, will never have such a benevolent dictator. As such the entire ecosystem needs to take the next steps in achieving bottom-up, self-organizing governance to steward these extraordinary resources forward.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/dontapscott” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Alex Tapscott “] is the founder and CEO of Northwest Passage Ventures. Don Tapscott is CEO of The Tapscott Group and an Inaugural Fellow at the Martin Prosperity Institute at the University of Toronto.

    This post is adapted from Don & Alex Tapscott’s new book, BLOCKCHAIN REVOLUTION: How the Technology Behind Bitcoin is Changing Money, Business, and the World and originally appeared in Thomson Reuters.

    Connect with the Authors on Twitter at @dtapscott and @alextapscott

     
  • user 3:35 am on May 28, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 8242, 8243, , , bitcoin, , , Combining, , , , hasAgentAddress, , Ricardian,   

    Alex Batlin’s Briefing of Crypto 2.0 Musings – Combining Ricardian and Smart Contracts 

    Alex Baltlin | Ricardian Contracts

    Baltlin&;s &; Personal View

    Nick Szabo proposed the idea of smart contracts back in 1997

    • Many kinds of contractual clauses (such as collateral, bonding, delineation of property rights, etc.) can be embedded in the hardware and software we deal with, in such a way as to make breach of contract expensive (if desired, sometimes prohibitively so) for the breacher.
    • A canonical real-life example, which we might consider to be the primitive ancestor of , is the humble vending machine. Within a limited amount of potential loss (the amount in the till should be less than the cost of breaching the mechanism), the machine takes in coins, and via a simple mechanism, which makes a freshman computer science problem in design with finite automata, dispense change and product according to the displayed price. The vending machine is a contract with bearer: anybody with coins can participate in an exchange with the vendor. The lockbox and other security mechanisms protect the stored coins and contents from attackers, sufficiently to allow profitable deployment of vending machines in a wide variety of areas.
    • Smart contracts go beyond the vending machine in proposing to embed contracts in all sorts of property that is valuable and controlled by digital means.

     

    The Origin of Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System

    Satoshi Nakamoto incorporated the idea of a smart contract in his Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System whitepaper. Instead of a vending machine safe keeping snacks and cash, and dispensing snacks plus change in exchange for cash, a distributed ledger, controlled by smart contract code, keeps account of how many bitcoins are held by which account and determines if new coins can be issued or existing ones transferred.

    So what happens when the vending machine fails to give you back the right change? Most likely you look for a sticker on the vending machine with a phone number to call. You call the number, tell the operator the machine number, they pull up the instructions on what to do in case of failure, based on clauses of the vending machine legal contract, and hopefully proceed to solve the issue.

    Wait, hold on, the operator follows instructions based on legal contract clauses! So there is an overall legal contract, some of contract clauses are performed by the vending machine’s smart contract code, others are performed by people. ’s design deliberately focused on a pure digital asset exclusively controlled by distributed-consensus-seeking smart contract code, which means that all legal clauses are covered by smart contract code, and hence there is no need for an encompassing legal contract, but for most real world use cases, including vending machines, you do need an overarching legal contract, and autonomous agents – be they humans, organizations or smart contracts, distributed or centrally operated, to ensure performance of one or more legal clauses.

    Traditional legal contracts are unstructured paper or electronic documents that are not machine-readable, not surprising given they were only designed for human consumption. They also tend to be declarative, not procedural in nature i.e. they specify what should happen, not how.

    That is why often there are operating instructions and procedures that describe how humans should do what things in order to comply with legal clauses. It is therefore useful to think of smart contracts as procedural code that is executed by a centralized or distributed-consensus-seeking platform in order to enforce performance of one or more declarative legal contract clauses, but in order to do that, the legal contract’s automation salient details must be machine readable.

     

    The Idea of Ricardian Contract

    This is where Ian Grigg’s idea of Ricardian Contract comes in

    • Our innovation is to express an issued instrument as a contract, and to link that contract into every aspect of the payment system.
    • By this process, a document of some broad utility (readable by user and program) is drafted and digitally signed by the issuer of the instrument. This document, the Contract, forms the basis for understanding an issue and every transaction within that issue.
    • By extension, all issues of value, such as currencies, shares, derivatives, loyalty systems and vouchers, can benefit from this approach.
    • A Ricardian Contract can be defined as a single document that is a) a contract offered by an issuer to holders, b) for a valuable right held by holders, and managed by the issuer, c) easily readable by people (like a contract on paper), d) readable by programs (parsable like a database), e) digitally signed, f) carries the keys and server information, and g) allied with a unique and secure identifier (content hash).

    Whilst the focus of a Ricardian Contract is in recognizing that financial instruments e.g. currencies, bonds, shares should be issued as human and machine readable contracts, same principles can be in my opinion applied more broadly to any kind of legal contract, so as to be fully or partially enforced by both human and smart contract autonomous agents.

    This is by no means a new idea. Primavera de Filippi published an excellent Legal Framework For -Ledger Transactions post about integrating legal and smart contracts. She cites CommmonAccord, a global legal contract template system, as a means to create Ricardian Contracts.

    Eris proposes an alternative eris: legal system, based on legal_markdown templates and CommonForm renderer, for what they call cryptographically-certain duel integration process:

    • Deploy a smart contract
    • Reference the chainId and contractAddress of the deployed smart contract in the final draft of the real world contract.
    • Finalize the real world contract and find its digital fingerprint.
    • Send a transaction logging the checksum of the real world contract into the storage of the smart contract.

     

    Blockchain enforces Ricardian Contract clauses

    smart contracts are by no means the only way to enforce Ricardian Contract clauses. Open-Transactions project, see whitepaper, implements financial instruments as Ricardian Contracts, processed by a transaction server based on cryptographic proof instead of trust, allowing any willing parties who wish to contract with each other to enjoy the benefits of a server without needing to trust it &8211; a solution that demotes transaction servers to mere notaries, only able to counter-sign contracts that have first been signed by their clients. Barclays’ Dr Lee Braine recently presented yet another alternative vision when he demonstrated an ISDA Master Agreement proof of concept on R3’s Corda &8211; a blockchain inspired platform lead by Richard Gendal Brown &8211; R3’s CTO.

    One of the issues I foresee with the emergence of many different template and markup standards is the very plurality of standards. How do you know that the term in contract A is same or different in contract B. How can you create a nice looking document, yet mark it up in such a way as to make it machine readable. Turns out most of these questions have already been solved by the Semantic Webproject in the form of RDFa standard that embeds Linked Data in HTML, an extension to HTML5 that helps you markup things like People, Places, Events, Recipes and Reviews.

    It builds upon standard Web technologies such as HTML, HTTP, RDF (allows creation of unambiguous structured data taxonomies) and URIs, but rather than using them to serve web pages for human readers, it extends them to share information in a way that can be read automatically by computers. RDFa was originally designed for Search Engines and Web Services to use this markup to generate better search listings and give users better visibility on the Web, so that people can find websites more easily, but in my opinion can be applied without alteration to Ricardian Contracts.

     

    Example Weather Insurance Ricardian Contract

    Let’s provide a simple example – a Ricardian Contract for weather insurance. Here is what a user would see in their web-browser:

    &;-

    Example:

    I, Alex Batlin, authorise the transfer from address &;abcdwerr&8217; to address &8217;24dsfrg3434&; using smart contract agent address &8217;24dsfrg3434&8242; of &8217;10&8217; unit(s) of GBP pounds held by smart contract address &8216;4854398578934&8217; on the condition that website &8216;Weather.com&8216; confirms that &8216;0.5&8217; cumulative inches of rain did indeed fall between start date &8216;9:00AM UTC 10th of March, 2015&8217; and finish date &8216;9:00AM UTC 11th of March, 2015&8217; in country &8216;GB&8217; and postcode &8216;EC2Y 0RT’.

    &8212;-

    Hopefully pretty much self-explanatory, but on first glance not very useful for machine consumption. Let’s have a look at the underlying HTML:

    &8212;-

    <html>

    <head>

    <title>Example <a href=&;http://reference.com/master-agreement-123&amp;;>Weather Insurance</a> Ricardian Contract</title>

    </head>

    <body prefix=&8221;rc: http://batlin.com/ricardian#&8221;&gt;

    <h1>Example Weather Insurance Ricardian Contract</h1>

    <p typeof=&8221;rc:RicardianContract&8221;>

    <span>I, Alex Batlin, authorise the transfer</span>

    <span property=&8221;rc:hasTransferAuthorisation&8221; typeof=&8221;rc:TransferAuthorisation&8221;>

    from address &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasFromAddress&8221;>abcdwerr</span>&8217;

    to address &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasToAddress&8221;>24dsfrg3434</span>&8217;

    using smart contract agent address &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:&8221;>24dsfrg3434</span>&8217;

    of &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasInstrumentUnits&8221;>10</span>&8217; unit(s)

    of GBP pounds held by smart contract address &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasInstrumentAddress&8221;>4854398578934</span>&8217;

    </span>

    <span property=&8221;rc:hasTransferCondition&8221; typeof=&8221;rc:TransferCondition&8221;>

    on the condition that

    website &8216;<a href=&8221;https://www.weather.com&8221; property=&8221;rc:hasOracleUrl&8221;>Weather.com</a>&8217;

    confirms that &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasCumulativeInchesOfRainDetected&8221;>0.5</span>&8217; cumulative inches of rain

    did indeed fall between start date &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasStartDate&8221; content=&8221;2016-03-10T09:00:00<&;>9:00AM UTC 10th of March, 2015</span>&8217; and

    finish date &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasFinishDate&8221; content=&8221;2016-03-11T09:00:00<&8220;>9:00AM UTC 11th of March, 2015</span>&8217;

    in country &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasCountryCode&8221;>GB</span>&8217;

    and postcode &8216;<span property=&8221;rc:hasPostCode&8221;>EC2Y 0RT</span>&8217;.

    </span>

    </p>

    </body>

    &8212;-

    You will notice that many HTML tags have additional attributes like property and type. When the same document is parsed through an RDFa parser, the following structured data (for this example in Turtle format) is extracted:

    &8212;-

    @prefix rc: <http://batlin.com/ricardian#&gt; .

    [] a rc:RicardianContract;

    rc:hasTransferAuthorisation [ a rc:TransferAuthorisation;

    rc:hasAgentAddress &8220;24dsfrg3434&8221;;

    rc:hasFromAddress &8220;abcdwerr&8221;;

    rc:hasInstrumentAddress &8220;4854398578934&8221;;

    rc:hasInstrumentUnits &8220;10&8221;;

    rc:hasToAddress &8220;24dsfrg3434&8221; ];

    rc:hasTransferCondition [ a rc:TransferCondition;

    rc:hasCountryCode &8220;GB&8221;;

    rc:hasCumulativeInchesOfRainDetected &8220;0.5&8221;;

    rc:hasFinishDate &8220;2016-03-11T09:00:00<&8220;;

    rc:hasOracleUrl <https://www.weather.com&gt;;

    rc:hasPostCode &8220;EC2Y 0RT&8221;;

    rc:hasStartDate &8220;2016-03-10T09:00:00<&8221; ] .

    &8212;-

    You will notice that at the top there is a link to the taxonomy definition file, which means every single property, is completely unambiguous. In fact you can define many different taxonomies or use many shared ones within the same document, which promotes re-use and efficiency, and you can use your client to also pull-in descriptions, labels, additional facts and any rules associated with a property. See if you can read the extract below, from the http://batlin.com/ricardian taxonomy file:

    &8212;-

    <rdf:Description rdf:about=&8221;http://batlin.com/ricardian#hasAgentAddress&8221;&gt;

    <rdfs:label xml:lang=&8221;en&8221;>Agent Address</rdfs:label>

    <rdfs:comment xml:lang=&8221;en&8221;>Address of the smart contract responsible for doing the actual condition transfer.</rdfs:comment>

    </rdf:Description>

    &8212;-

    Pretty powerful stuff! It’s worth pointing out that many financial vocabularies or taxonomies like ISO20022 are already expressed in XML Schemas, which can be easily converted to RDF schemas. In another words you do not need to re-invent how create your legal documents, just write them in HTML, which even MS Word supports, you don’t need to re-invent structured data serialization – use RDF, you can use RDFa to mark-up HTML with RDF, and you can reuse existing taxonomies like ISO20022 either by converting them from XML Schema or writing them native in RDF Schema or OWL.

    So ok, you have defined your Ricardian Contract as RDFa marked-up HTML document that grants someone the right to withdraw some money from someone’s account based on a pre-specified condition, now what?

    This is where I get inspired by Bitcoin – it defines a distributed ledger that safe keeps bitcoins and defines in a smart contract the generic transfer and issuance rules e.g. only allow someone who possesses the correct private key to spend only the ones what they own etc. If I try and create a more generic pattern, lets say on Ethereum, I end up with what I called the Instrument Smart Contract (ISC) – something that defines the procedural rules linked to one or more contractual clauses of a financial instrument Ricardian Contract and keeps ledger of ownership.

    Bitcoin actually specifies some of it’s transfer rules via scripts attached to transactions – default one being that a specific key is required to spend the transactions, whilst double spend prevent etc. rules are hardwired into the protocol code. Scripts can support more advanced conditions like multisig. To create a more generic and re-usable pattern, I propose the idea of an Agent Smart Contract (ASC)– something that encapsulates more user specific conditions in procedural code to achieve the declarative end state, again linked to legal clauses.

     

    Agent Smart Contract

    In effect, the Weather Insurance ASC is granted permission to transfer value held in the GBP ISC from issuer to beneficiary if it is presented with sufficient evidence by the beneficiary. In this example, proof-of-contract and proof-of-weather (a form of proof-of-condition) will be required as evidence. Proof-of-contract is the digitally signed Ricardian Contract expressed as RDFa marked-up HTML document. Proof-of-weather is in this case a digitally signed JSON response from a RESTful API service by Weather.com with contract matching parameters. It could as easily be a smart contract controlled by a smart oracle – if on-chain notary is an advantage.

    Here is a, not at all well thought out, process to claim your insurance and get paid:

    • Beneficiary buys the weather insurance from an insurer and receives from them by email or other means the digitally signed Ricardian Contract, which is stored in beneficiary’s digital wallet.
    • Beneficiary’s wallet will inspect the contract and decide when it should query the weather service to determine if a claim can proceed.
    • Assuming a claim can proceed, the wallet sends a transaction that primarily includes the Ricardian Contract to the ISC to register the ASC as a trusted third party able to act as a value transfer delegate on behalf of the issuer.
    • The wallet then sends a transaction to the ASC, primarily including the Ricardian Contract and Weather.com JSON response.
    • The ASC validates the contract and JSON response, and if all ok sends a transaction to the ISC, instructing transfer of GBP in this case from issuer to beneficiary.

    Note, the ASC may itself be an ISC – meaning that for instance if you buy a bond, the bond gives you the right to get paid coupons from the issuer’s money smart contract. In this way you can implement complex atomic swaps spanning multiple instruments e.g. Delivery vs. Payment, Payment vs. Payment. In fact the ASC may be a good place to implement Interledger’s notary services, as long as the ISC supports ledger-provided escrow. Interledger is a protocol for payments across payment systems. It enables secure transfers between ledgers and allows anyone with accounts on two ledgers to create a connection between them. Ledger-provided escrow removes the need to trust these connectors. Connections can be composed to enable payments between any ledgers, creating a global graph of liquidity or Interledger.

    The ASC can also be a good place to implement state (micropayment) channels and off-chain oracles. Many contracts never get exercised e.g. options, insurance – so recording them on-chain is a waste of resource – good enough security can be achieved without use of on-chain smart oracles or storage of contract instance if proof-of-contract and proof-of-condition (in this case weather) is submitted to ASC when the claim needs to be made. Another advantage of this approach versus bundling all logic into the instrument code is flexibility – code can be kept tight and implement core logic, and allow many claim conditions e.g. if the holder of a bond fails to collect coupon payments, but has a credit default swap, this can be activated and money collected from underwriter.

    Source: Content from https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/crypto-20-musings-combining-ricardian-smart-contracts-alex-batlin and Image from http://www.lyntonweddingvenue.co.uk/hands.jpg

    The post Alex Batlin’s Briefing of Crypto 2.0 Musings &8211; Combining Ricardian and Smart Contracts appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 7:35 pm on May 27, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , bitcoin, , ,   

    Technology behind Bitcoin is coming to high finance faster than predicted 

    Bitcoins underlying is a potential disruptor to the way core businesses have been working. This is the reason why it has been catching everyone’s attention, especially those involved in the financial services industry. The blockchain technology is in fact driving most innovation by companies in the present time. Start-ups to well-established companies are involved or interested in putting the blockchain technology to use and benefiting from it in some way or the other.

    The idea of applying blockchain technology outside of the realm of has gained a lot of interest from forward-thinking companies in the past year or so. Blockchain applications are also called “distributed ledger technology” because they remove the need for a centralized database and, like Bitcoin, give every transaction in a particular system a cryptographic hash that can be checked by any member of the group.

    In a report published in December, “Beyond the Hype: Blockchain in Capital Markets”, McKinsey said there is great promise in distributed ledger technology but expects that development will require cooperation among market participants, regulators and technologists.

    IBM, Intel, Cisco, J.P. Morgan and several other big are among those making a big bet on blockchain. The companies have joined forces to create the Open Ledger Project with the Linux Foundation, with the goal of re-imagining supply chains, contracts and other ways information about ownership and value are exchanged in a digital economy. The Open Ledger Project is described as a development library that will allow businesses to build custom distributed ledger solutions, without needing to rely on open, public blockchain such as those offered by bitcoin and Ethereum. To show its commitment towards the development IBM has open sourced a significant chunk of the blockchain code it has been working on, putting its weight behind the Linux Foundation and its hyper ledger project.

    R3 (R3CEV LLC)  leading a consortium of 42 financial companies in research and development of blockchain usage in the financial system. The full list of banks signed up are: Banco Santander, Bank of America, Barclays, BBVA, BMO Financial Group, BNP Paribas, BNY Mellon, CIBC, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Citi, Commerzbank, Credit Suisse, Danske Bank, Deutsche Bank, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, ING Bank, Intesa Sanpaolo, Macquarie Bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Mizuho Financial Group, Morgan Stanley, National Australia Bank, Natixis, Nomura, Nordea, Northern Trust, OP Financial Group, Scotiabank, State Street, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, Royal Bank of Canada, Royal Bank of Scotland, SEB, Societe Generale, Toronto-Dominion Bank, UBS, UniCredit, U.S. Bancorp, Wells Fargo and Westpac Banking Corporation.

    Last week a consortium of 11 giant banks including UBS and Credit Suisse announced that they had completed their first trial run of the idea of using software inspired by the digital currency Bitcoin to move assets around more efficiently was successful.

    While all this development was going on Bank of America is trying to steal a march on the latest developments in the technology behind digital currency bitcoin by loading up on blockchain-related patents. BOA has already filed for 15 blockchain-related patents and is currently in the process of drafting another 20 to be submitted to the U.S. Patents and Trademark Office (USPTO) later this month.

    Applying the blockchain concept to the world of Finance and IOT offers fascinating possibilities. Right from the time a product completes final assembly till the delivery , payment and service.Blockchain have a part for each process involved in business to make it more efficient, faster and reliable.

    Auxesis a startup from IIT Bombay is a blockchain application development company going to release Btc2Bid for its European partners. We welcome entrepreneurs, managers having ideas related with the Blockchain for a cup of coffee to realize your ideas into products.

    Thanks for reading you can also find me at facebook.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/kumargauravitc&#8221; connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Kumar”]

     
  • user 12:27 pm on May 25, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: authenticate, bitcoin, , , , ShoCard, SITA, , travelers,   

    ShoCard and SITA want to store your ID details on the blockchain to authenticate travelers 

    ShoCard  and , the IT company for the air transport industry, have been working together on an interesting project. They&;ve been looking at ways to your ID on the to manage traveler identification. More generally, ShoCard has been working on a seamless service that lets you store your identity onto the blockchain. This way, anyone can retrieve and… Read More


    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 8:08 am on May 25, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , bitcoin, , ,   

    Nets explores blockchain technology in cooperation with Coinify – PR 

    Two of Europe’s biggest players in digital and payments, Nets and Coinify respec=vely, are joining forces where Coinify will develop integrated blockchain solutions for Nets.

    Nets has entered into a partnership with company Coinify by establishing a ‘Blockchain Development Lab’ in order to iden8fy business opportunities in the field of blockchain . The partnership involves cooperating with internationally renowned experts in this field of technology with the intention to develop a number of proof of concepts as the basis for developing specific products and services.

    Coinify ApS is the largest facilitator of blockchain payments in Europe and supports more than 20 payment service providers reaching over 100,000 online businesses. Coinify payments support up to 17 blockchain currencies and offer payouts to their customers in local currencies. At the same time, Coinify also provides consumer and corporate trading of digital currencies, such as . As such, Coinify is the leading provider of blockchain payment services in Europe and Asia, and is among the top four worldwide in this field.

    “We see potential in blockchain technology, so obviously we need to gain a thorough understanding of it and the possibilities it offers. Coinify is a leader in the development of products based on this technology and we believe they are the right partner to help us inves8gate the possibilities of developing customer-oriented products and services based on it,”says Jan C. Plenge, Senior Vice President with responsibility for Digital innovation at Nets.

    Blockchain is a decentralised technology which can be used, among other things, as documentation of direct bilateral digital transfers, or to document ownership of contracts, deeds, etc. By joining forces, Nets and Coinify seek to clarify how this technology could be applied commercially and within existing regulatory frameworks, particularly within the same high-level security requirements that Nets already applies to other value transactions.

    “It is important for Nets to closely monitor new digital technologies to be aware of the possibilities, even if that means blockchain technology could poten8ally challenge parts of our exis8ng business. For many years, we have been the ones delivering the latest payment solutions to , and we intend to keep it that way, going forward,” Jan C. Plenge continues.

    Regarding the partnership, CEO and Co-founder of Coinify Mark Højgaard comments: “Nets is the leader when it comes to digital payments in the Nordic region and we are delighted with this new partnership, and believe that, together with Nets, we will be able to develop a number of first-class products and services that will ultimately benefit both merchants and consumers.”

    About Coinify

    Coinify ApS operates as a blockchain payment service provider with focus on extending blockchain currency payment processing and trading services to merchants and consumers respectively. Coinify serves global Payment Service Providers, online businesses, physical shops, and individuals. The company incorporated in 2014 and is backed by a multimillion dollar capital injection from SEED Capital (funded by the Danish government) and Accelerace. Headquartered in Copenhagen, Denmark, Coinify is a leading blockchain payment service provider (bPSP) with strong presence on the European and Asian markets.

    Visit http://www.coinify.com for more information.

    About Nets

    Nets’ ambi8on is to connect banks, companies and consumers through innova8ve digital payment solu8ons. We are behind the Dankort, Betalingsservice and NemID, for example. We cover the Nordic and Baltic regions, delivering a whole raft of services in the field of card payments, account transfers and payment solutions for merchants. Nets employs 2,500 staff and turnover in 2015 was DKK 6.8 billion.

    Read more at http://www.nets.eu.

     

     
  • user 3:43 am on May 25, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , bitcoin, , , , , , Read, , Webpages   

    10 Must Read Bitcoin and Blockchain Blogs and Webpages 

    As bitcoin/blockchain technology is gaining much traction from the financial world and beyond, a number of dedicated online publications and have emerged to share expert commentary and industry news.

    Today, we&;ve made a list of the top 10 and online publications and blogs to follow to keep up with this fast-paced industry:

    Check also out our lists: &;Top 10 Fintech News Sites and Blogs&; and  “15 Insightful Fintech Blogs You Might Not Know“  and &8220;Top 10 Fintech Books&8221;

    CoinDesk

    Coindesk logo bitcoin blockchain publication

    Founded in 2013 by serial entrepreneur Shakil Khan, CoinDesk is a news site focusing on bitcoin and digital currencies and undoubtedly one of the world&8217;s leading blockchain-centric online publications.

    CoinDesk covers news and analysis on the trends, price movements, technologies, companies and people in the bitcoin and digital currency world.

    In January 2016, CoinDesk was acquired by Digital Currency Group.

    Bitcoin Magazine

    Bitcoin Magazinebitcoin magazine logo bitcoin blockchain news publication

    is the oldest source of news, information and expert commentary on Bitcoin, the blockchain and the digital currency industry.

    Founded in 2012 by Vitalik Buterin and Mihai Alisie, Bitcoin Magazine provides analysis, research, education, and thought leadership at the intersection of finance and .

    Bitcoin Magazine was acquired by BTC Media in January 2015.

    The LTB Network

    bitcoin magazine logo bitcoin blockchain news publication

    The LTB Network is a publishing network created for content providers to present the ideas and people involved in the world.

    The publishing platform is built on token-controlled access technology developed by the team at Tokenly.com which allows contributors to be rewarded with LTBCoin, the official token of the network.

    Founded by Adam B. Levine, The LTB Network started with the Let&8217;s Talk Bitcoin podcast.

    Brave New Coin

    Brave New Coin bitcoin blockchain blog

    Based in Australia, Brave New Coin is a company that specializes in digital assets and market data.

    The company operates a news portal that covers the digital currency and blockchain industry and has published a number of featured articles by renowned contributors such Chris Skinner.

    CryptoCoinsNews

    CryptocoinsnewsCryptocoinsnews logo bitcoin blogs

    (CCN) is an independent news source focusing on bitcoin, digital currencies and blockchain technology. It is a popular source of cryptocurrency news, with writings often cited in other mainstream and economic publications.

    Founded in 2013 by Jonas Borchgrevink, CCN is part of PF Wetting, a company registered in Oslo, Norway, which also owns and operates Hacked, an online publication specializing in cryptography and IT security news.

    NewsBTC

    NewsBTC bitcoin blog

    Founded in October 2013, NewsBTC is an online publication covering cryptocurrency news, technical analysis and forecasts for bitcoin, litecoin, dash, doge and other digital currencies.

    It is one of the fastest news services in the industry and has been mentioned in publications such as TechCrunch, CNN, Forbes, Business Insiders, and others.

    AVC

    Fred Wilson VC blogger blockchain bitcoin

    AVC.com is the personal website of renowned American businessman, venture capitalist and blogger Fred Wilson.

    Wilson, the co-founder of and a partner at Union Square Ventures and Flatiron Partners, has been blogging since 2003.

    His blog covers a wide range of topics including venture capital, politics, mobile technologies, crowdfunding, wearables, robots and drones, and of course bitcoin and blockchain technology.

    Ripple Insights

    Ripple blog Insights blockchain

    Ripple is without a doubt one of the hottest startups right now. Having raised over US$ 38 millions from the likes of Andreessen Horowitz, CME Group, IDG Capital Partners and Lightspeed Venture Partners, the company has received a number of awards and distinctions for its groundbreaking distributed ledger technology that promises to allow and financial institutions clear and settle transactions in real-time via a distributed network.

    The Ripple payments network and protocol has been adopted by a number of financial services firms and is being tested by a number of banks around the world including in Australia, Asia and Europe.

    Its blog delivers company updates but also insights on the blockchain space and the impact of technology on the financial services industry.

    MoneyBeat (The Wall Street Journal)

    wsj_moneybeat_bitcoin blockchain fintech blogs

    The Wall Street Journal&8217;s MoneyBeat is a blog that provides analysis and news stories about the financial world.

    Bitcoin and blockchain-related news and stories are predominantly covered by financial reporter Paul Vigna.

    Vigna, along with former WSJ journalist Michael J. Casey, are the authors of &8220;The Age of Cryptocurrency,&8221; a publication released in early-2015 that explores the world of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies.

    FT Alphaville (The Financial Times)

    FT Alphaville bitcoin news blog

    FT Alphaville is a free daily news and commentary service of the Financial Times. FT Alphaville has four core components: news and commentary, morning briefing notes, markets live and the Long Room, an exclusive comment and analysis arena.

    Its &8220;Bitcoinmania&8221; section, led by financial journalist Izabella Kaminska, covers the latest news as well as the history of Bitcoin.

     

    Top bitcoin blockchain blogs & Webs 2016

    The post 10 Must Read Bitcoin and Blockchain Blogs and Webpages appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 9:36 pm on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: bitcoin, ,   

    Glimpse of the future Insurance products 

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAldAAAAJGQwNTE1NDBiLWI3OTctNDQ3ZS1iOWQ5LWQwY2MwMTJmMzExNQOn April 6 2016, Daimler has let three of its autonomous trucks loose on the highway to complete a successful trip from Stuttgart to Rotterdam[i].

    The ripples of such an achievement go beyond reducing congestion, cutting down CO2 levels and accidents caused by human error.[ii]

    Combined with cryptocurrencies and , a new conceivable scenario will appear in the insurance industry were its products can be delivered based on new features through decentralized autonomous organizations – DAOs. Features that are designed to fit the autonomous economy we are heading for.

    The DAO’s system consists of massive public ledgers that are able to communicate and transact with each other in a real-time mode. It will not only save the millions of dollars’ databases cost, but also reduce fraud to minimum. It can be built to attract 3rd party participants like insurance pool admins, sales, claim assessment, etc. and instead of working for an insurance company, members work for a piece of software!

    Over the course of time, self-driving trucks will be practical reality with features that aid in lane shifts, parking, speed control, and highest safety rates for its occupants. We can expect accidents to occur due to harsh weather conditions and/or machine malfunctions. Hence the once dangerous and deliberate behaviors of humans such texting, reading, drinking, or even sleeping while driving are no longer be considered as “liability”.

    Reducing all accidents and fatalities that arise from human error means fewer claims and that will tear down premium rating structure. DAOs can issue policies covering an autonomous vehicle with first-party coverage, paying for injury to the truck’s occupants or for the damage to the vehicle in case of an accident. Insurance premium can be relative to miles driven, and the “mode of driving” whether it was Autonomous or Manual – where Manual driving incurs much higher premiums. So tailgating a mini cooper carries very high risks that multiplies your premium by a hundreds.

    Through algorithms built on top of the blockchain, policy holders have accounts tied to their wallets, in which premiums are deducted automatically in ratio to the miles driven. As long as bitcoins exist in the policyholder’s account, payments will be made and coverage exists. Low balances will be notified via the truck dashboard or any mobile phone, and the policyholder can terminate his policy any time with instant stopping of the open payment channel. The DAO is linked to the GPS systems of each autonomous truck and as soon as ON; they start reporting live data to the blockchain.

    Oracles can feed the blockchain with information on miles driven, mode of operation, the make and model of the truck, weather statuses, and other considerable live data, of course including the occupants encrypted medical files and personal info. Accordingly, then a premium is set and its gets paid automatically.

    Autonomous trucks are able to continuously monitor roads with a broad range of sensors like visible and infrared light, including ultrasound, with a nearly 360-degree field of view![iii]

    The algorithm can gather the logs to determine which parts of the vehicle were damaged, and simultaneously compares price data for all replacement parts, order them from the factory, send a mechanic to the garage, and pay for all costs incurred. Therefore, the policyholder is guaranteed coverage on the truck for full replacement cost.

    In addition, Algorithms can also distinguish between the truck movement characteristic in a genuine accident and staged one. If the movement of the truck coincides with previous Manual driving patterns related to fraud, the algorithm will simply deny claim.

    High premiums are planned to discourage the engagement of Manual Mode, except in emergencies. So enjoying the thrill of Manual driving, could be felt on designated driving tracks were race truck shows are held. Arena insurance companies provide reduced coverage for Manual operation, as long as the truck is only driven on the track.

    As the data transmission enables the DAO to identify the amount of damage to the truck, different information can help in accurately paying body injury claims.

    Upon physical harm, the nature of the injury and the cost of the recovery can be reported on the medical blockchain, that also verifies the license of the Doctor who’s attending the injured person. Payments from DAO can be deposited directly into the Doctor’s bitcoin wallet.

     We all envision autonomous trucks to operate on major highway corridors, yet insurance policies that fits this industry are key in welcoming them. Autonomous trucks will require Autonomous insurance – best delivered through a decentralized autonomous organization. 

    [i] http://www.gizmag.com/daimler-connected-autonomous-trucks-challenge/42631/ 

    [ii] http://www.cato.org/publications/policy-analysis/policy-implications-autonomous-vehicles

    [iii] http://insurancethoughtleadership.com/tag/autonomy/


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://nl.linkedin.com/in/tey-el-rjula-50b59242&#8243; connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Tey El-Rjula”], is corporate trainer on Digital Currencies and Blockchain and this article was originally published on linkedin

     
  • user 1:49 am on May 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: bitcoin, , , , , , ,   

    Ether Price Surges 50% as The DAO Draws Trading Interest 

    While has long dominated the digital currency space, has been grabbing headlines – and volume – this week.
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 10:54 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , bitcoin, , , , Lexicon, ,   

    The Alternative Fintech Lexicon 

    shutterstock_294517823

    The Lexicon

    – Accelerators: Where startups go to learn. What they learn is anybody&;s guess. See Decelerators.

    – Alternative Lending: An alternative way to make the same mistakes in lending, over and over again. See Crowdfunding.

    – Anonymity: Required when discussing either financial services executives bonuses or the use of offshore centers when optimizing taxes and ownership structures. Not required when users interact with financial services firms. See Privacy.

    – AML (Anti Money Laundering): A set of procedures, laws and regulations financial services firms occasionally follow and regulators occasionally enforce. See KYC.

    &;  API (Application Programming Interface): A set of routines and protocols Wizards use to develop magical and frictionless interaction between software applications. Alternatively, an acronym Muggles use when pretending to be wizards.

    – API Call: A call muggles make to a private fintech investigator when trying to crack innovation, as in &;I think I I am going to make A Private Investigator Call now as this digital innovation thingie is very tricky.&;

    – Artificial Intelligence (AI): Neither Artificial nor Intelligent. A major vector for future unemployment in the financial services industry.

    – Augmented Reality (AR): Where the sex industry and the financial services industry will eventually meet.

    – Big Data: Applied to most data analytics projects to produce negative returns.

    : A Numismatist&8217;s worst nightmare.

    – Bitcoin : A group of digital prisoners, chained to one another, and bound to perform menial digital tasks recorded on a digital ledger in return for the promise of a better future life.

     &8211; Brick and Mortar: A Financial Services Incumbent&8217;s Alzheimer&8217;s moment.

    – Cards: Credit, Debit, Reloadable, Gift. The most profitable scam in the history of the financial services industry.

    – Card Not Present / Card Present (CNP/CP): Arcane revenue producing schemes for the payment industry.

    – Checking Account: Soon to be yesterday&8217;s money machine.

    – Conferences (Fintech): Gathering places where thought leaders pretend to educate, startups pretend to pitch, corporates pretend to care, venture investors pretend to scout for investments. Contrary to popular belief, pizza is not served freely at conferences. See Hackathons.

    – Consensus Ledgers: Free range Blockchains. Also, for the accountants in the audience, not a ledger. See Bitcoin Blockchain, Ethereum.

    – Consensus Machines: Free range Consensus Ledgers, bred with organic Turing corn.

    – Core Systems: The tools with which service providers keep , insurance companies, asset managers hostages.

    – Corporate Venture Capital (CVC): The art of pretending superior investing will occur when informed by corporate fiat. Alternatively, the science of Fin over Tech. See Venture Capital (VC).

    – Crowdfunding: Applies to either equity or lending. The art of pretending it takes a crowd to finance stuff. See Alternative Lending and Equity Crowdfunding.

    : A currency which adheres or belongs secretly to a party, sect, or other group.

    – Customers: The one thing most fintech startups are still looking for. See Traction.

    – Decelerators: Where startups go when they move too fast. See Accelerators.

    – Digital: Related to the storing of information as either a 0 or a 1. Example of a 0: &8220;Soon we will have zero brick and mortar branches&8221;. Example of a 1: &8220;Banking executives compensation is again approaching 100% increases.&8221;

    – Digital Banker/Insurer/Asset Manager: Tomorrow&8217;s endangered species.

    – Disintermediation: The act of creating another overlord as in &8220;My API will rule over your API.&8221; See API.

    – EMV (EuroPay, MasterCard, Visa): A technical standard built to promote online fraud.

    – Entrepreneur: Central protagonist in ancient Greek tragedies or comedies involving the critique of money. Alternatively, a post Marxist practitioner. See Startup.

    – Equity Crowdfunding: Platforms that may provide much work for litigation lawyers in the future.

    – Ethereum: A public blockchain platform which promises to free digital prisoners shackled to other public blockchains. See Bitcoin Blockchain.

    – Ethics: An extraordinary expense that appears below the EBITDA line both in GAAP and IFRS.

    – Financial Inclusion: An issue solved by according to blockchain enthusiasts. A profitability issue according to financial services incumbents. A game changer according to social impact investors.

    – Fintech: Neither &8220;Fin&8221; nor &8220;Tech&8221;. Modern day alchemical process.

    – Fraud: The act of defining loose operations control in order to elicit fraudulent activities which will eventually be billed at cost plus to the end user. In the payments industry, the tradeoff between convenience and privacy.

    – Free: A new &8220;source of revenue&8221; paradigm, e.g. free trading, free investing, free payments. To be noted, free fraud is not yet recognized as a new source of revenue.

    – Gateway: A purgatory software interface where payments transit before reaching heaven.

    – Governance (in Fintech): What often lies beyond the wall.

    – Hackathons: Events that bring fintech developers, designers, corporate executives and innovation managers together around pizza. Hackathons organized around the summer solstice are sought-after events, as it is believed pizza tastes better during that period of the year.

    – Hash: Non-edible but still intriguing recipe comprising mathematical algorithms that map data of arbitrary size to data of fixed size. Frequently used in the Insurance industry as exemplified by the old saying &8220;The actuary made a hash of the life expectancy of millennials.&8221;

    – Incubators: Where corporations are able to smother good fintech ideas to death.

    – Innovation: What VCs overpay for. What corporations are seldom capable of delivering. What only a few startups can deliver.

    – Insurtech: Ego booster term crafted for the Insurance industry. See Fintech.

    – Interchange Fee: Soon to become a land far far away, especially in the US.

    – Interest Rate(s): A conceptual think piece for most fintech startups. Baudrillard&8217;s famous tirade comes to mind when addressing the Sorbonne in 1968, &8220;If interest rates were so important we would have used the term FinInt or IntTech, not Fintech.&8221;

    – Jinn: Spirit capable of appearing in human or animal form and influencing VC investors, corporations and startups alike via consulting analysis, recommendations, white papers. See White Papers.

    – Joy: What fintech startups seldom experience. Referred to in the context of an Initial Public Offering (IPO).

    – Know Your Customer (KYC): The process whereby a business weighs the cost of verifying a client&8217;s identity against the profitability of said client. For a fintech startup, that which will be developed and financed when the sooner of a cease and desist letter from a regulator is received or a $ 100 million funding round is closed, maybe. See AML.

    – Lead Generation: A poor man&8217;s version of revenue building.

    – License(s): Put or Call Options that give a regulator the right but not the obligation to levy fines in the future based on real or perceived violations of the terms of the license granted.

    – Menagerie: Pack of Thought Leaders focused on cornering the market for social media power ranking and industry top lists via &8220;elaborate&8221; insider trading techniques. See Thought Leader.

    – Millenials: What fintech startups say they focus on and financial services incumbents know they have no clue about. See Customers.

    – Mobile Wallet: Darwinian evolution of a checking account. That which will generate revenue, but not necessarily to financial services incumbents.

    – Near Prime Credit: A set of customers who are sub prime but for marketing purposes are labelled near prime as copywriting and creativity is important in the lending industry. See Sub Prime.

    – Net Interest Rate Margin (NIM): The wet dream bankers and insurers dream every time they sleep.

    – Network effect(s): Often talked about, seldom witnessed in the financial services industry.

    – Non Performing Loans: According to alternative lenders, crowd lenders, p2p lenders, marketplace lenders, a mathematical impossibility.

    – Non Traditional Data Sets: Data sets you would not want your mother to know about, let alone look at.

    – Omnibus Account: A money-carrying vehicle, originally horse-drawn. Most bank-operated omnibus accounts are allegedly still operated manually and horse-drawn.

    – P2P: A business model that allows people or entities that have nothing in common to do business with one another. From the word &8220;peer&8221; which means &8220;complete stranger&8221;.

    – Payday Lending: The act of producing indentured servitude.

    – Paying Customer: The rarest of species, seldom observed in the wild by startups.

    – Payments: Payments come in two varieties. The &8220;slow&8221; variety which refers to the medical condition whereby financial services incumbents produce revenue via the sloth-like pace of provisioning of payments. The &8220;fast&8221; variety which refers to a simple technology feat which most financial services firms pretend is impossible to achieve.

    – Payment Network(s): Money printing machines.

    – Personal Financial Management (PFM): Movement originally triggered by the wealth transfer mechanism that occurred between Intuit shareholders (buyers) and Mint shareholders (sellers).

    – Platform(s): The shoes many incumbents want to wear.

    – Prime Credit: A set of customers lenders desperately would like to lend to but never do as these customers seldom need credit. See Near Prime.

    – Privacy: What is enforced after weighing the cost of breach and compliance against executives bonuses as in &8220;We only had to pay $ 10 million fine for the latest data breach&8221;. See Anonymity.

    – Proof of Work: An emerging contributor to global warming.

    – Quantum Computing: That which will render many things and many people redundant.

    – Rails (Payment): Train tracks over which steam locomotives shuffle back and forth wagons chock full of payments.

    – RegTech: Because regulators should have their tech too. Alternatively, because why not.

    – Regulator(s): Satan and his minions, unless they use technology. See RegTech, White Walkers.

    Advisors: Not a robot. Not a financial advisor. Fancy term for a digital channel.

    – Scaling: The ability to gain traction in unique ways in fintech, e.g. &8220;Startup bankruptcies tend to scale well.&8221;, &8220;NPLs scale with ease in a down credit cycle.&8221;

    – Smart Contract: Neither smart, nor a contract. For a blockchain developer, nirvana. For a lawyer, anathema. It is believed that through selected breeding a new specie of lawyer/developers will be created thereby enabling the wide adoption of smart contracts.

    – Spice: A highly addictive Melange which fintech celebrities &8211; VCs, entrepreneurs &8211; consume daily and heightens their awareness and prescient abilities. Repeated exposure to &8220;Up&8221; Spice mutates fintech celebrities bodies into virtual social media avatars. Repeated exposure to &8220;Down&8221; Spice is deadly.

    – Startup (Fintech): Ancient Greek play. Can either be a tragedy or a comedy. Focused on exploring and expanding upon a post Marxist critique of money. See Entrepreneur.

    – Sub Prime: A set of customers that even copywriting cannot disguise and that, with the help of advanced data analytics, will yield positive returns, up to a breaking point. See Big Data.

    – Token(s):  Reduces fraud, makes EMV obsolete, helps with authentication and authorization of transactions in the payments industry. In other words, a really cool and useful thing which explains why it is so darn difficult to adopt industry wide.

    – Traction: The startup science of demonstrating progress in the absence of Customers. See Customers.

    – Thought Leader: Rhetorician who occasionally attends conferences for the pizza, not realizing hackathons are where the dough is. See Menagerie, Conferences and Hackathons.

    – Uberization: An event that simultaneously holds the lowest probability of occurrence and the highest probability of utterance in fintech.

    – Underbanked: A universe of people and businesses that refuse to comply with traditional profitability measures as defined by financial services incumbents.

    – Unicorn: Animal hunted for its skin by rational investors. Alternatively, animal bred for its magical properties by irrational investors.

    – Valuation: A +/- rounding error. Also, one of the key ingredient of Spice. See Spice.

    – Venture Capital: The art of pretending superior investing will occur when informed by market fiat. Alternatively, the science of Tech over Fin. See Corporate Venture Capital (CVC).

    – Veteran: Old hand operator with minimum 30 years experience in the financial technology industry and minimum 4 credit or business cycles under his/her belt. There are few veterans in activity. The only credible actors to be equally efficient and effective at either of fintech investing, fintech startup building, fintech innovation. One can recognize a veteran based on his/her use of profane language and colorful views on his contemporaries.

    – Wallet: What any participant in the industry wants to &8220;share&8221;, as long as it is not theirs, as in &8220;Our share of the customer wallet is important for our future health.&8221;

    – White Papers: Exercise in casuistry.

    – White Walkers: Government officials who hold the power to resurrect dead banks but not yet the power to resurrect fintech startups to the dismay of VC investors.

    – Xanadu: An idyllic place otherwise known as the Silicon Valley. &8220;In Xanadu did the great VC Khan / A stately pleasure dome decree&8221; is a alternative copycat poem published in the 19th century describing fintech venture investing and venture eco systems.

    – Yield: See Interest Rate(s).

    – Zelig: Describes the act of mimicking the fintech activities of leaders, as in a &8220;me too&8221; fintech VC or a &8220;me too&8221; startup. For example &8220;This fintech venture fund is so zelig!&8221;

    FiniCulture

     
  • user 8:24 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , bitcoin, , ,   

    The New Banking Standard 

    In this op-ed, enthusiast Martin Hagelstrom touches on the slow but steady embrace of by the world’s .
    fintech techcrunch

     
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