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  • user 3:35 pm on June 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Blockchain, , , , , , , ,   

    Blockchain To Optimize and Secure Client Data Information – Part 1 

    As becomes increasingly powerful, meaningful and valuable, concerns over its security are on the rise. Indeed, ‘big data’ has become the recent buzz-term to describe the ever-expanding, often-unstructured nature of important , and has opened extensive discussions over how to approach ensuring data integrity is maintained.

     

    Data Security

    One of the primary appeals of is the security it provides, which prevents such data from being hacked. The data is fed into the system, where an encrypted code – known as a ‘hash’ value &; is created for each initial transaction. Unique hashes are then combined (which allows large amounts of data to be processed), before being placed onto the block’s header along with a timestamp. At this point, the header becomes of a cryptographic puzzle which must be solved by the blockchain’s network of users – through a trial and error process, from trillions of possibilities – before it is finally added to the blockchain. This layered system of security, therefore, is being sought after by industries in which information is of a highly personal and/or valuable nature.

     

    Blockchain application in healthcare

    One of the most eagerly anticipated applications of blockchain is in healthcare, an industry which has long needed to undergo data optimization. In late January 2015, US health insurance provider Anthem learned of a massive cyberattack to its IT system, which ended up compromising a staggering 80 million patient and employee records. Because only one entity was being used to keep records of sensitive client health information, all data became readily available to the hackers from this single source.

    The blockchain, however, uses cryptography to enable security in record-keeping, as well as sometimes using a system of ‘multi-signatures’, whereby gaining approval to the blockchain – and access to client data – requires the approval of several authorised users. Moreover, this can apply to all client data. Given the intensely private nature of such information, it requires the utmost protection, which blockchain can provide. Information relating to the client’s identity, medical history, specific diagnoses, treatments undergone and much more can thus be protected.

     

    US companies lead the early blockchain explorations in healthcare

    The US is currently leading the way in much of the early explorations, although the Dutch health giant Philips Healthcare is also investigating blockchain’s scope for use in the health industry. Little has been revealed about Philips’ project, other than it is in collaboration with Tierion, a start-up which is facilitating the collection and storage of big data on the blockchain. Tierion uses a system called chainpoint to ensure that all the data can be verified by blockchain receipts and timestamps. Meanwhile, California-based blockchain company Gem is also examining blockchain’s healthcare potential.

    Gem CEO Micah Winkelspecht believes blockchain’s true benefit will be realized once independent parties within the health industry can be connected to the ledger to manage the lifecycle of a hospital bill. The blockchain, therefore, could be used to manage payments for numerous parties, including “insurance companies, hospital billing departments, lenders, and patients”, and Winkelspecht is now in discussion with relevant stakeholders within the health industry to explore this possibility. From there, Winkelspecht attests that blockchain can then be used “to manage the lifecycle of a patient’s medical record”, among other uses.

    US blockchain company Factom, which is currently working with the Honduran government to provide greater security for the country’s land registry data, has also partnered with medical records and services solutions provider, HealthNautica, whose clients include hospitals and physicians, in order to use blockchain to enhance the security of medical records and achieve efficiency in claims processing. HealthNautica’s data, ranging from medical bills and client-physician communications to claims and disputes, will be cryptographically encoded by Factom, which produces a digital fingerprint of the data which is time-stamped and verified.

    Patient confidentiality is maintained throughout because at no point is client data seen by third parties, Factom included. HealthNautica president Shailesh Bhobe calls Factom’s blockchain the “perfect fit” for improving the security of its data, while board member Andrew Yaschuk believes that if health insurance companies are also educated on the merits of blockchain, all parties can be involved in verifying claims data while still protecting client confidentiality.

    The post Blockchain To Optimize and Secure Client Data Information &8211; Part 1 appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 5:03 am on June 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Blockchain, , , , , , Pass,   

    Ether Prices Pass $20 Milestone in Network First 

    The price of , the native digital asset powering the ethereum , surpassed $ 20 for the time ever yesterday.
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 12:19 am on June 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Blockchain, , , ,   

    Blockchain Wallets: ‘Bigger Than the Internet’? 

    Jaxx plans to do for what the did for communications. Toronto-based consultancy and software development company Decentral announced last week that it has integrated Jaxx, its unified platform for blockchain wallet services, with exchange platform ShapeShift. “You were able to buy and sell cryptocurrency, and alsoRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:19 am on June 17, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Blockchain, , , ,   

    Blockchain Wallets: ‘Bigger Than the Internet’? 

    Jaxx plans to do for what the did for communications. Toronto-based consultancy and software development company Decentral announced last week that it has integrated Jaxx, its unified platform for blockchain wallet services, with exchange platform ShapeShift. “You were able to buy and sell cryptocurrency, and alsoRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 7:34 pm on June 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Blockchain, CADCoin, , Comments, , , , ,   

    This is Only a Test: Bank of Canada Comments on CAD-Coin Blockchain Trial 

    ‘s central says that its ‘CAD-coin’ project isn’t intended for use as an actual interbank payment system, but merely as a .
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 6:13 pm on June 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Blockchain, , , , , Middle, Printed,   

    How a 3-D Printed Building Became the Center of Blockchain in the Middle East 

    CoinDesk profiles a recent meeting of the Global Council, a 40-member working group seeking to boost the in the MENA region.
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 3:30 pm on June 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Blockchain, , , Land, , , ,   

    Sweden Tests Blockchain Smart Contracts for Land Registry 

    The government of is experimenting with how could be used to record titles in a bid to digitize real estate processes.
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 12:49 pm on June 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Blockchain, , , , , , ,   

    Bank of Canada Demos Blockchain-Based Digital Dollar 

    The Central of revealed yesterday it is developing a version of the Canadian based on .
    fintech techcrunch

     
  • user 7:35 am on June 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 71abc0fd45ed, , , Blockchain, , , ,   

    Blockchain technology: Redefining trust for a global, digital economy 

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    This post is co-authored with Michael Casey, Senior Adviser, MIT Media Lab

    It seems everyone is talking about and distributed ledger . Google Trends data show that searches for the word “blockchain” have exponentially increased. News articles tout the blockchain’s unique “digital ledger technology” as a solution for everything from bypassing Wall Street’s rent-seeking middlemen to reforming developing world democracy.

    A good deal of this could be hype. But the blockchain is a major breakthrough. That’s because its decentralized approach to verifying changes in important information addresses the centuries-old problem of , a social resource that is all too often in short supply, especially amid the current era’s rampant concerns over the security of our personal data, our finances and our transactions. It turns out that fixing that can be a boon for financial inclusion and other basic services delivery, helping to achieve the global objectives laid out in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    Sorting out hype from reality may depend on how well we identify where institutions that have until now played a role in mediating trust between people are falling short, especially in the key area of money. Deploying the blockchain in those settings to generate secure, decentralized trust could achieve great strides in inclusion and innovation.

    What do we mean by decentralized trust? The concept is unfamiliar in part because its converse — centralized trust – is something that we often take for granted, at least while it’s working. But if we look at the history of transactions since the early barter systems to modern-day digital money exchanges, we can see how different trust protocols have evolved and how, in each case, centralizing trust within particular institutions has periodically caused problems.

    As strategies for dealing with this challenge evolved, different trust bearers emerged. Charting that evolution, we can also see parallel changes in the tokens that encapsulate mediums of exchange and stores of value. Societies’ systems of trust, in other words, have always been intrinsically linked to their definitions of money.

    Financial transactions: trust bearing and encapsulating of the value of money throughout history

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    Graphic design by Duina Reyes <[email protected]>

    Tribal chiefs were the first trust bearers, acting as de facto guardians of the collective memory, which “recorded” tribe members’ exchanges of value. But one or several tribe members’ memory was not enough to track the multitude of transactions over time. People then introduced tallies and other early registers, such as the nick-sticks of the King of England, to help overcome the issues of tampering and to act as bookkeepers.

    Later, governments issued money backed by diamonds and precious metals, especially gold, to encourage trust in the monetary system. These commodities were scarce, ensuring they retained their value, and also had the advantage of being easily transportable and divisible. This practice has since been supplanted by the issuance of fiat money without the backing of a physical commodity, a shift that has left adherents of the gold standard uncomfortable to this day In essence, they don’t trust the government guarantor to maintain the value of the currency.

    The age-old debate over gold cannot be divorced from the outsized role that commercial have increasingly assumed within our monetary system, a shift that altered the composition of money and gave them a key record-keeping function as delegated trust bearers. As banks recycled deposits by issuing claims against them in the form of checks and promissory notes, fiat government money was transformed into a wider circulation of credit/debt money. That left banks occupying quasi-independent nodes in a dispersed and fragmented network of ledger-keepers.

    This created a difficult balancing act as the assets side of the banks’ ledgers were illiquid, since long-term loans could not easily be called, while their liabilities were very liquid, since depositors could call their funds into cash at any time. Public trust in banks’ management of that relationship became a vital social good whose frequent breakdown gave rise to banking crises. That led to the creation of central banks, which offered lender-of-last-resort services in return for regulatory scrutiny. A hub-and-spokes structure emerged, with a centralized ledger managed by the central bank acting as a trust backstop for the multitude of subordinate commercial bank ledgers, where most of society’s monetary balances remained.

    This centralized trust model, with its siloed information pools, has since been digitized. But its structure hasn’t changed. And, even with central banks doing their darnedest to manage the core problem of mismatched assets and liabilities, the systemic relationships between banks’ independent and closed ledgers has become extremely hard to manage as the system has become more complex and interconnected. (The 2008 financial crisis is best viewed as a breakdown in public trust in the ledger-keepers). Meanwhile, hacking attacks against banks, such as those which recently allowed criminals to exploit the international exchange messaging service Swift show that these big repositories of data remain vulnerable.

    This is where the blockchain and distributed public ledgers come in. We now have the prospect of supplanting those risk-laden trust bearers with a more robust, decentralized model. This kind of ledger, shared among a network of autonomous computers, which confirm and validate its content by following a unique algorithm that compels them to act in the common interest, is essentially tamper-proof. The cryptographic protections are such that, under current computing capability, to go back and change past data entries would require a prohibitively expensive amount computational power. That’s why it’s often described as the world’s first “immutable ledger.” This makes for safer monetary transmission and for a more or less permanent record of digital money transactions.

    Money might be just the start of it. The topics discussed at this past week’s Blockchain Summit on Necker Island in the British Virgin Islands reveal a dizzying array of non-currency use cases for the technology: Some are working on real-time transfers of stocks and bonds, bypassing the financial intermediaries that currently engage in a convoluted chain of clearing and settlement procedures. Musicians and photographers are storing ownership data about their digital works on the blockchain to gain autonomy over their copyrighted material and build direct, creative relationships with fans and other artists. Retailers are using the blockchain to turn loyalty points into a de facto currency. Hospitals are trying out systems that give patients control over their personal records while opening encrypted versions of them in aggregate form so that research can be done on the data. The blockchain’s disintermediating potential is being tried out in trade finance, supply chain management, auditing, voting systems, notary and legal services, and the big one, digital identity.

    Just as importantly, blockchain technology will facilitate the future that technologists, governments and businesses are already planning for. Many believe the Internet of Things (IoT), in which potentially hundreds of billions of devices will transact and share information across a complex array of communication lines, will be insecure and inefficient unless it’s built on a blockchain structure. It won’t be cost-effective for banks to manage these billions of tiny transactions, and while device makers, software providers and telecom companies may want to position themselves as intermediaries for these exchanges, it’s not clear how they would be able to interoperate with each other. As a group of IBM engineers noted in a paper launching a blockchain-based program for the IoT , such a decentralized system is needed to “save the future of the Internet of Things.”

    As an extension of this IoT issue, the blockchain may also be needed to secure the distributed, decentralized power grids that communities around the world are building in the interest of energy efficiency and security. The new grids will be based on complex IoT networks in which interlinked home-based solar energy cells; autonomous, auto-communicating smart meters; and locally based electrical devices are all exchanging information, electrons and money with each other. It’s the antithesis of the old centralized model, where a public utility is trusted to deliver the power, monitor and manage each home’s meter, keep track of how much they use and owe, and then invoice everyone. Public power utilities will have no economic stakes in those localized transactions, and so can’t be tasked with monitoring the data and sending out invoices. Instead, this future energy infrastructure needs a decentralized trust protocol and a digital currency that can seamlessly flow between devices at low cost. Blockchain technology is the prime candidate for providing both.

    So, what of economic development and those SDGs? Well, as distributed ledgers overhaul the legacy banking processes, the hope is that developing-world financial systems can leapfrog to the next generation. This has parallels with the leapfrogging that billions of people did when they gained access to mobile phone services well before they had landline telephones.

    Perhaps the biggest promise in this evolution of trust protocols and digital money is that it might advance financial inclusion. The blockchain has the potential to offer a less cumbersome, less expensive infrastructure for sending money, which could finally make it cost-effective for financial institutions to service the poor. If this technology can also be used to secure robust, self-sovereign digital identities around personal data, there’s a real possibility that people in places with poor documents, registries, and rule of law can finally establish trusted measures of their otherwise good reputations. This would allow them to assert who they are and show why a bank should give them a loan.

    Meanwhile, the prospect of storing and updating property title and cadasters on the blockchain could for the first time allow the poor to assert reliable title claims to their homes and use them as collateral for borrowing. Similarly, if small and medium-sized enterprises could irrevocably prove ownership of business and commercial assets – e.g., equipment, livestock, inventory – they could gain access to working capital and, by extension, to a much wider, global marketplace.

    Now for the caveat: the implementation of this technology will, like all new technologies, come with major costs and challenges. It could mean massive layoffs, this time in services sectors such as law and accounting. There’s also a “garbage-in” risk that the information that’s input into a blockchain isn’t accurate, creating a permanent ledger of faulty data. Finally, the immutability and irreversibility of transactions might make it harder for individuals and firms to arbitrate solutions whenever there’s a dispute.

    Then there’s the question of which blockchain model to use.

    The blockchain is the most established, valuable public blockchain that’s free from any trusted authority’s control. In theory – and in practice, so far – that makes it the most robustly tamper-proof. But it has its limitations: an open-source governance structure makes it hard to make contentious changes to the operating algorithm; the transaction-processing capability needs to be significantly increased if blockchain uses are to be expanded beyond pure bitcoin currency payments; its anonymity features, while strengthening decentralization, do not fit comfortably with society’s identity-focused legal system; and bitcoin’s massive, “permissionless” network of autonomous transaction validators (know as “miners”) uses an inordinate amount of energy.

    Some are now looking at alternative models of private, or “permissioned,” blockchains, which distribute a shared ledger across many nominally independent computers according to the authorization of some trusted entity. That makes for a more efficient, easily governed system, but it inherently reintroduces some of the risks associated with centralized trust bearers and limits the amount of freewheeling innovation that can occur on such platforms. When it comes to the financial system in particular, there’s a strong case to be made for a decentralized model that’s not controlled solely by banks. That way we avoid entrenching the systemic risks of the current infrastructure. We don’t want a too-big-to-fail blockchain.

    The good news is that amid the rapid pace of open-source “” innovation, multiple solutions to these challenges are being explored. It’s hard to imagine that distributed ledger technology isn’t coming, one way or another. When it arrives, the impact on society could be profound. It is therefore critical that governments engage their citizens and each other in serious discussion about the underlying trust infrastructure of 21st century digital society.

    In some cases, we may discover that it’s best to stick with centralized trust bearers, especially if their existence is integral to the bonds on which our communities are formed. But in many other situations, we may find we’re better off investing trust in an algorithm that manages shared information across a decentralized network.

    It’s too early to know the answers. That’s why it’s incumbent upon all of us to study and understand how to maximize the benefits of this technology. With serious research, we can discover the best ways to use it to lower costs and increase access to financial services while protecting the social capital that’s vital for economic development. Society must make swift changes that accommodate the demanding nature of these new models, keeping in mind the unprecedented competition and challenges facing incumbent financial institutions and regulators. If we get this transformation right, and do so in a collective, collaborative manner, it could provide a vital building block for achieving the international community’s SDGs.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/marianadahan&#8221; connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Mariana Dahan”] is Senior Operations Officer at World Bank| United Nations 2030 Development Agenda| Coordinator| Economist| Technology and Innovation Advocate.

    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaeljohncasey&#8221; connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Michael Casey“] is Senior Advisor, Blockchain Opportunities at MIT Media Lab / Consultant / Public Speaker / Author.

    This article was originally published on linkedin.

     
  • user 3:35 am on June 16, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Blockchain, , , , , , , , , ,   

    What’s the next big thing in Financial Services Technology? – Find out at London Fintech Week 2016 

    London Fintech Week – 3rd annual world’s largest fintech-focused festival – is back!

    &; the most competitive  centre in the world &8211; has a thriving community. It is nearly unbelievable that how many fintech events are set to take place in London this year. According to EventBrite, there are more than 50 fintech events in London from now until the end of . There will be conferences, workshops, summits, seminars, forums and networking events about fintech segmentations such as , insurtech, banking, lending, payments, as well as about startups and entrepreneurships. The main purpose of these events is to enhance the dialog between established multi-nationals, innovation firms, disruptive start-ups, government, media and investors.

    One of the notable events coming up this June & July is the London Fintech 2016 from July 15-22. Fintech Week is the world’s largest Fintech-focused festival, and this is the 3rd year it is organised. London Fintech Week 2016 comprises a series of conferences, workshops, hackathons, meetups and drinks receptions.

    London Fintech Week 2016

    Special Offer: Sign up now with code FTSW to get 15% discount for ticket registration!

    Fintech Week London 2016 &8211; Agenda
    This year Fintech Week will start with a Blockchain Hackarthon Weekend, followed by 4 days of conferences focusing on important Fintech sectors such as Money and Payments, Capital Markets, Insurance Innovation, Security and Data and so on. Every conference day will also feature a small number of exhibitors. The 5th day is dedicated to workshops run by our partners. Every evening there will be an official meetup, networking event, or drinks reception taking place in various locations across the City of London and Canary Wharf.

    London Fintech Week 2016

    Apart from running a number of conferences, hackathons, meetups and private events, Fintech Week London 2016  also plays match-maker to enterprise corporations and innovative start-ups. The event also helps design and enhance innovation and transformation programmes. Their team members come from diverse backgrounds so they’ve layered a transformation consulting offering on top of their events and world class network.

    Join Fintech Week London 2016 now to get inspired, learn something, meet new clients, partners, developers, investors and value for your business. Investors will also benefit from having hundreds of startups all in one place.

    Special Offer For Fintechnews Switzerland: Sign up now with code FTSW to get 15% discount for ticket registration!

    *Another upcoming fintech event in London is FinCoder &8211; a conference tailored especially for Fintech technologist, developers and coders.

    fincoder

    Fintech developers are changing the face of the financial industry. Discover new opportunities, ways to tackle challenges and the latest trends in financial services . The billion pound Fintech firm could be in the room.

    Special Offer: Sign up now with code FTSW to get 20% discount for ticket registration!

    The post What’s the next big thing in Financial Services Technology? – Find out at London Fintech Week 2016 appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
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