The future of bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and NFTs, according to 30+ experts – Fast Company

In the past year, weve seen multi-million-dollar NFT sales, Dogecoin drama, cryptocurrency price uncertainty, ransomware hackers being paid off in Bitcoin, and growing concern over the environmental impact of cryptocurrency mining. Behind those headlines, a larger movement was happening. Cryptocurrency, and the blockchain that underpins it, is evolving as a powerful, decentralized alternative to the dominant fiat system of money and banking.

As with many aspects of tech and society, cryptos emergence accelerated during the pandemic. But how exactly, and whats next? We asked numerous people who are involved in crypto in various capacities. Heres what they said.

Alex Salnikov, co-founder and head of product, Rarible:The pandemic has accelerated everything into digital. Crypto was no exception. DeFi (decentralized finance) and NFT (non-fungible token) markets boomed as people were sitting at home and playing with digital assets.

Aaron Slotkin, CEO consultant, NFT maxi:The fact that everybody was stuck at home and fully digital further magnified peoples focus on digital developments and specifically crypto and NFTs. As a result, this technology and these currencies, which have existed for years, have gotten further magnified. Crypto was already here to stay, but COVID has accelerated this pathway.

Kosala Hemachandra, founder and CEO, MyEtherWallet:Id like to think crypto is made for situations like the pandemic, and thats why crypto was thriving all [through] 2020. It is borderless. It doesnt care whether the airports are open or closed, or whether people can go out or not. Many financial institutions had to close down, which brought down the value associated with them.

Sole Cnepa, technical operations manager, BitGive Foundation:I dont think the pandemic affected where bitcoin is going or where it is now. Bitcoin may be affected by corporative and state adoption, the search for greener options for the mining industry, the current Taproot improvement and leverage behavior (using broker money to place bets). Bitcoin is just going through natural progress as weve seen since the start. No surprises here for long-term bitcoiners.

Brent Johnson, chief information security officer (CISO), Bluefin:Large-cap cryptocurrency reached all-time highs within the last few months; including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Binance Coin, and Cardano to name a few. Were now seeing athletes being paid in crypto, card brands allowing settlement via crypto, large investment firms adding crypto to their portfolios, and even governments adopting crypto as legal tender.

Brianna Martyn, blockchain consultant:Ethereum and NFTs have gone from being buzzwords used by traders and technologists to digital assets known the world over. Discussions around money supply, inflation, digital rights, proof of ownership and smart contracts are now part of the financial world and likely to grow over the coming years. Bitcoin has gone from a white paper concept to an official reserve currency in just 12 years. These feel like once in a lifetime changes that are happening in front of us today. I cant wait to see what sort of innovation and growth the next decade brings to the digital world.

Kathleen Breitman, co-founder, Tezos:What is interesting about the burgeoning popularity of NFTs in the cryptocurrency space is that they managed to attract newcomers to the technology. In March, press coverage about the ecological impact of the Ethereum platform managed to temper enthusiasm from many famous people who looked to NFTs as a way to monetize some aspect of their creativity. This was the first time that I saw people who had been skeptical of cryptocurrencies look to them as a potential solution for their business, and actually care about the technology underneath them in a substantial way. For me, this was the most transformative change that Ive seen in the industry to date.

Brian Mosoff, CEO, Ether Capital:Crypto, prior to 2020, was largely driven by technically proficient retail investors. Institutions and traditional investors had largely written off software-based or algorithmic monetary policy. As concerns surrounding inflation emerge due to the pandemic, this group began seeking an alternative asset class as a hedge.

Tegan Kline, co-founder of Edge & Node:The pandemic accelerated crypto. The monetary policy response fueled investment appetite for alternate stores of value. Stay at home orders freed up recreational appetite to engage in yield farming which initiated defi summer.

Hossein Azari, former Google senior research scientist and founder of cmorq:The pandemic magnified some of the value propositions of crypto and decentralized finance. We learned that our legacy financial system could have done better sending the stimulus funds to American businesses and individuals. With decentralized finance we remove/reduce dependency on centralized and legacy financial systems, modernizing ourselves to continue economic leadership.

Natalie Smolenski, Head of Business Development at Hyland:The pandemic has clarified more than ever that central banks are committed to printing their way out of economic crises, which raises twin dangers of inflation and devaluation of the currency, a process that erodes both real wages and peoples life savings. As a result, people around the world are turning to bitcoin as a long-term store of value. While its price is certainly volatile, over time it shows an unmistakable upward parabolic appreciation, whereas fiat currencies, including the dollar, have steadily lost much of their value since the mid-20th century.

Daniel Sax, founder and CEO, Sensi Properties:The pandemic has cemented the future of cryptocurrency as a direct result of the fiscal and monetary response [to the pandemic], including but not limited to the Federal Reserve printing 30% of the money supply out of thin air.

Cleve Mesidor, founder, National Policy Network of Women of Color in Blockchain:What has been promising is seeing a greater number of women explore investing in bitcoin and Black and Latinx creatives tapping the benefits of non fungible tokens (NFT). Cryptocurrency is a new financial asset class that was not created by or for the wealthy. So it has been interesting to see CEOs like Elon Musk and Wall Street executives try to inject themselves into bitcoins narrative. Despite all the noise, the truth is cryptocurrencies are accessible and available to everyone, unlike the traditional financial system, and thats a game changer.

Jonas Rey, co-founder and managing director, Liti Capital:El Salvador just announced that its businesses are now required to accept bitcoin as a currency. Instead of world powers, it will be the small countries that make the change first, causing a massive revolution around the world. As more and more people make the switch, the large countries and entities will be forced to accommodate cryptocurrency. Like all revolutions, the worlds financial revolution will start from the ground up, and it will be caused by financial inequality and lack of access to the tools that have historically been used to hold those same people down.

Colin Pape, founder, Presearch:Part of this societal shift is driven by people who see the far-reaching control of Big Tech over their digital and financial lives. In the same way [crypto has] challenged the financial status quo, decentralization using blockchain technology will disrupt the dominance of Big Tech, giving people access to unbiased information online, as well as more ownership of their personal data and real digital privacy.

Betsy Cooper, Aspen Institute:The pandemic didnt change the trajectory of cryptocurrency as much as it changed the trajectory of criminals. As a result of the pandemic, more people desperately needed quick capital, and more criminals had the time to figure out how to deploy ransomware. As criminal activity grew, so did the use of cryptocurrencies for payment.

Kevin Mandia, CEO, FireEye:It used to be that if you were an attacker and you wanted to monetize your hacking capabilities, youd hack into computers and steal credit card data. Now you can deploy ransomware or you can steal documents and extort the fact that youre going to publicly release that information. Digital currencies are basically anonymous currencies so now you can commit a crime from 10,000 miles away from the victim, and remain anonymous collecting the payment. There is no question that digital currency, as it is today, enables cybercrime.

Meg King, Science and Technology Innovation Program director, The Wilson Center:Cryptocurrencies have a ransomware problem. Banning cryptocurrencies isnt an option, especially as nations are now adopting them, but we can implement more reporting and regulatory requirements and encourage other nations to do the same.

Richard Ells, CEO and founder,ETN-Network:The popular media is quick to report bitcoin crashes or bitcoin used by criminals. While a small number of criminals undoubtedly use bitcoin, it is inherently more traceable due to the nature of blockchain than U.S. dollar bills. So if we have to ban one or the other, we should also ban the U.S. Dollar because criminals use it!

Jeff Gluck, founder, CXIP Labs:NFTs represent unprecedented creative and financial potential for artists, but the potential for fraud, theft, and data loss has never been greater.

Matthew Rogers, CISO of Americas, Syntax:Companies making it easier to pay in crypto over the past year will . . . allow for individual people to become targets for ransomware attacks versus just businesses like were often seeing. This is likely bad news for the industry and could lead to even more ransomware attacks on a wider range of people and businesses.

Liesl Bernard, CEO, CannabizTeam:Innovative companies looking to distinguish themselves from the competition are bringing cryptocurrency to the table in order to attract top talent in a job market where more than 70% of U.S. employers are struggling to find qualified candidates. As we shift toward a more remote workforce, employers and employees can both benefit from the expedited and secure ease of payments in cryptocurrency. The number of businesses including cryptocurrency in employee benefit and compensation packages will only continue to increasewhether thats offering payment in cryptocurrency, investment opportunities, crypto bonuses, etc.

Jessica Huseman, Editorial Director, VoteBeat:There has been some talk recently of potentially running elections on the blockchain. This would not work, and would be a tremendous waste of taxpayer dollars. I have yet to find a security expert not working for a blockchain company who believes this to be a secure platform for voting.

Kurt John, chief cybersecurity officer, Siemens USA:The success or failure of cryptocurrency will be based on two critical topicsmeasured demand thats based on strong fundamentals such as continually improving encryption technologies, along with a planned and predictable regulatory environment.

Gary Shapiro, president and CEO, Consumer Technology Association (CTA):National guardrails should be established to protect consumers, save energy, and deter crime and cybercrime. But . . . if the U.S. overly hinders new technology, other nations may step up to provide incentives for the innovators behind these cryptocurrencies to flourishas wearealreadyseeingin Latin America. Policymakers should work with and engage innovatorstosecurethe U.S.as a leader in cryptocurrency.

Robert E. Siegel, lecturer, Stanford Graduate School of Business:We need to separate the recent overhyped speculative activity of the crypto market from the fundamentals of what crypto and blockchain will bring to society over time. On the latter the ideas and technology have the potential to be transformational. But the recent craziness is not based on fundamentals; rather, it is being driven by a world flooded with liquidity and zero percent interest rates from governments. Money is sometimes made in times of speculation.Usually, money is lost.

Maxwell Gross, COO, SuperBid:Exorbitant NFT sales, dogecoin drama, speculation, and criminal activity are frequencies which resonate with humans but distract from the signal. Simply, blockchain is the birthplace of an efficient means of globally scalable transactions, and its first application is crypto. Its just the beginning.

Philip Gradwell, chief economist, Chainalysis:Dogecoin has gained the attention of meme lords and investors alike, bridging the gap between finance and pop culture. Dogecoins trading volume is currently within the top 10 cryptocurrencies, ahead of XRP, USDC, DOT and UNI. For a token that started as a joke, this tremendous growth shows how the power of the internet has thrown all rules about investing out the window. Dogecoin may just be a meme, but it is likely driving more awareness than the $19.6 billion that U.S. financial services spent on digital advertising in 2020.

Ian Khan, futurist:The future of bitcoin and crypto, in general, will continue to fluctuate and make waves. One of the reasons [is that] this is a highly hype-based crypto era where influencers like Elon Musk and others will continue to play with the emotions of an already stressed investor community that is desperately trying to come out of a global pandemic.

Diogo Monica, co-founder and president, Anchorage Digital:Its a foregone conclusion that crypto is here to stay, and sophisticated investors know the noise will always be a part of it.

Harsch Khandelwal, CEO, UREEQA:Incumbents first ignore the new entrant, then they make fun of the new entrant, they eventually fight the new entrant, and finally, theyre unseated by the new entrant. Were transitioning from a period in which established players mocked the space to one in which theyre fighting it. Considerable energy is consumed in mining gold, for example, and cash has always been king for criminals globally.

Rob Chang, co-founder and CEO, Gryphon Mining:I believe we will look back at this period in time as the point where the general public was given the opportunity to give cryptocurrencies a real hard look and learn that coins such as bitcoin are not magic internet funny money but instead legitimate, decentralized ways to transact value without the fetters of banking institutions and government control/devaluation.

Nigel Green, CEO and founder, deVere Group:The blistering pace of the digitalization of economies and our lives means that from now on there will be a growing demand for digital, global, borderless money. When it comes to cryptocurrencies, the genie cant be put back in the bottle.

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The future of bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and NFTs, according to 30+ experts - Fast Company

Its kick-off time: Enjoy Euro 2020 finals the crypto and blockchain way – Cointelegraph

The date is set. July 11 is when soccer fans all over the world can, for a period of at least 90 minutes, forget all about whats wrong with the outside world and finally get to witness who will be the winner of one of the most widely viewed sports in the world. England and Italy will compete for the honor to win the coveted UEFA European Football Championship 2020, or Euro 2020, trophy, which only comes around once every two years.

Here is a little thought experiment for all the casual soccer fans out there: Try to think of every active soccer player you can think of. If the athletes in question are all relatively established and play for the top leagues in the world, then there is a high probability that they are representing their country in this years Euro 2020 championship.

To really put things into perspective as to how big this event is, a recent study showed that a staggering 23.8 million viewers watched England's historic Euro 2020 victory against Denmark, with the last five minutes of the nail-biting semi-finals drawing a peak audience of over 25.7 million. In fact, the events viewership was only eclipsed in recent memory by the United Kingdom Prime Ministers coronavirus announcement back in May, which was seen by nearly 27 million people across six different local news channels.

A month of tense and exhilarating soccer has passed by and now its time for the two remaining top dogs, Italy and England, to fight it out at the historical Wembley Stadium.

In the past, the tournament has seen many of Europes heavyweights slug it out. However, it bears mentioning that this time around, the Italian team, The Azzurri, has yet to lose a match in a whopping 33 international games, leaving them just a step away from carving their names in the records of soccer history.

Their opponent, England, also known as the Three Lions, has also had strong gameplay through this years Euro 2020. They only allowed one goal during their entire campaign, which is quite an impressive feat, considering the level of competition they had to face countries like Germany, the Czech Republic and Ukraine to get to the finals. In all, the rosters for both teams look stacked and on paper, this clash should and probably will be a thriller.

As one can expect, there is going to be a lot of betting happening for this game, with the oddsmakers giving the slight edge to England, which is arguably a surprise considering Italys unbeaten run. However, the importance of home-turf advantage can never be underestimated in soccer, no matter how many Italians may have crossed over to watch the finals in person.

Lastly, with the rise of blockchain casinos and increased crypto adoption globally, a growing number of digital currency investors seem to have started making use of their crypto assets for gambling purposes. Therefore, it stands to reason that a lot of these folks may be betting on this game as well, either through crypto gambling platforms or even prediction markets.

In recent years, a growing list of mainstream soccer clubs has continued to launch their very own digital currencies/fan tokens. And while the jury is still divided on the actual utility of these offerings, the fact of the matter remains that the soccer world has been quite sharp in recognizing the technological and monetary proposition put forth by crypto.

In terms of betting, there are dozens of established gambling websites that accept a wide range of cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin (BTC), Litecoin (LTC), Bitcoin Cash (BCH), Dogecoin (DOGE), Tether (USDT), Ethereum (ETH) and more. There are many options out there and its just a matter of which platform a person decides to use in the end.

It also goes without saying that several betting sites are currently offering their users numerous side-bets another facet of online gambling that crypto enthusiasts can engage with. For example, the odds of Italy coming out of the tournament as the top-scoring team are currently at 10/11. Whereas for England, the figure stands substantially lower at 10/1.

From a streaming standpoint, unfortunately, there arent a number of mainstream streaming services that accept cryptocurrency payments at the moment. That being said, betting portals have really upped their game over the last couple of years, with most platforms nowadays offering top-notch live streams that gamers can access at any time, given that they have sufficient tokens (which is usually not a lot) in their wallets.

One way or the other, crypto seems to have made its way onto the soccer field, as was made evident recently when a fan literally ran onto the field wearing a t-shirt that read WTF Coin during Belgiums clash with Finland. In fact, the event was able to garner so much traction that within hours of the invasion, almost every major sporting news outlet had covered the story, resulting in people discovering that WTF Walnut Finance is actually a yield farming project.

Furthermore, the governing body overseeing Euro 2020, i.e. the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) recently entered into a five-year global partnership deal regarding blockchain technology with AntChain, a subsidiary of Ant Group which owns Alipay, one of the worlds largest digital payment platforms.

As part of the deal, UEFA and AntChain will work closely to help utilize blockchain tech to not only promote the game but also to digitize the global soccer landscape. In this regard, it stands to reason that the two parties may potentially choose to explore the NFT sector because of the unique marketing/ownership opportunity presented by this exploding asset class.

In the immediate future, however, the winner of this years Euro 2020 Golden Boot (i.e., the player that scores the most goals) will be awarded the Alipay Trophy. Not only that, but the top scorers records will also be stored on a blockchain system immutably.

Regarding NFTs, it bears mentioning that over the past week, decentralized fantasy sports platform Rage Fan has been airdropping limited edition NFT mints to commemorate the Euro 2020 tournament. The last giveaway is set to commence on July 11 when England and Italy meet each other at Wembley.

It is no secret that athletes from sporting professions across the board have continued to adopt crypto at a rapid rate. In terms of soccer alone, no one has done more to promote digital currencies than Andrs Iniesta, Carles Puyol and Gerard Piqu, three players who have all represented Spain and Barcelona during their careers.

In fact, the triumvirate has been quite hands-on in its crypto outlook, with Iniesta and Puyol serving as the co-founders of Olyseum, a blockchain-powered social platform built to reward engagement, bringing fans and stars closer together. Meanwhile, Piqu has been vocal about his investments in the crypto-enabled fantasy soccer game Sorare. Even French superstar Antoine Griezmann is reported to have an investment in the platform.

Netherlands once-highly regarded wing/striking prospect Ryan Babel is also a Bitcoin proponent, highlighted by the fact that over the past year or so, he has repeatedly shared his optimism surrounding the crypto market via a number of tweets encouraging people, particularly his teammates, to buy BTC.

This is definitely a question that begs to be answered.

Heres a quick add up of the transfer values for the (likely) starting eleven players of both teams that are participating in the final, just to see how much Bitcoin can be bought with the money.

So as per data available, the valuation for Englands starting eleven comes to 570 million euros ($718.5 million), with the squads captain and star striker Harry Kane pitching it with a 120 million euro valuation. On the Italian side, the amount comes to 411 million euros ($488.7 million), with the outgoing A.C. Milans 22-year-old goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma accounting for 60 million euros of the total.

This brings the total valuation of the two teams up to a staggering 981 million euros (almost $1.2 billion). At the time of writing, this comes to around 35,800 BTC that can be acquired with the aforementioned sum.

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Its kick-off time: Enjoy Euro 2020 finals the crypto and blockchain way - Cointelegraph

Global Blockchain Markets 2021-2026: Analysis & Forecasts with Focus on Over 80 industries – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Global Blockchain Market 2021-2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The global blockchain market should reach $56.7 billion by 2026 from $6.0 billion in 2021 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 56.9% for the forecast period of 2021 to 2026.

In this report, the market has been segmented based on organization size, component, provider, type, industry and geography. The report provides an overview of the global blockchain market and analyzes market trends. Using 2020 as the base year, the report provides estimated market data for the forecast period 2021-2026. Market values have been estimated based on the total revenue of blockchain solution providers.

The report covers the market for blockchain with regard to the user base across different regions. It also highlights major trends and challenges that affect the market and the vendor landscape. The report estimates the global market for blockchain in 2021 and provides projections for the expected market size through 2026.

The scope of the study includes blockchain development platform and associated services as well as services associated with the platform. However, cryptocurrency wallets and mobile applications developed in the blockchain platform, predeveloped blockchain applications and physical services have been excluded from the study.

Key Topics Covered:

Chapter 1 Introduction

Chapter 2 Summary and Highlights

Chapter 3 Blockchain: Market Overview

Chapter 4 Market Breakdown by Organization Size

Chapter 5 Market Breakdown by Component

Chapter 6 Market Breakdown by Provider

Chapter 7 Market Breakdown by Type

Chapter 8 Market Breakdown by Industry

Chapter 9 Market Breakdown by Region

Chapter 10 Competitive Landscape

Chapter 11 Company Profiles

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/uvgt5d

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Global Blockchain Markets 2021-2026: Analysis & Forecasts with Focus on Over 80 industries - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire

Users of The Graph can now earn money curating blockchain data – The Block Crypto

Blockchain data curation is now an open, competitive market. Thats according to The Graph, which today released new features aimed at decentralizing the process of creating and organizing its blockchain indexing tools.

The Graph has become a popular tool among Ethereum developers, who use its Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), which the company calls subgraphs, to fetch and consolidate information that is scattered across many different transactions across the Ethereum blockchain and the Interplanetary File System (IPFS).

Among other things, the new tools the San Francisco-based startup is launching today will make it easier for users and even profitable for users to curate subgraphs. The idea is that this will in turn make it easier for developers to discover useful ones, without the need for a centralized aggregator or publisher.

Users of The Graph have already been curating subgraphs, which are built to retrieve specific kinds of data required for a DApp for instance, the decentralized video streaming service LivePeer to run smoothly.

But curation will begin in earnest on Thursday with the launch of the curation market, Yaniv Tal, co-founder of Edge & Node, which created The Graph protocol, said in a recent interview with The Block.

The initiative is part of The Graphs ongoing efforts to decentralize. The platform has been transitioning from a centrally hosted service to one that is run by a decentralized network.

So far, 20,000 developers have built 16,000 subgraphs hosted on The Graphs centralized hosting service. Eight DApps LivePeer, Audius, UMA, mStable, Reflexer, Opyn, PoolTogether, DODO have migrated to The Graphs decentralized protocol.

The new curation market is in line with what Tal promised last year after an outage knocked many applications offline. He said that eventually, developers would no longer have to publish their subgraphs directly to The Graphs hosted service, and that independent indexers would run nodes and process queries in an open marketplace. He added that curators would organize data and signal which subgraphs are useful and accurate.

How does it work in practice? Once a curator finds a good subgraph, they signal on it using Subgraph Studios The Graphs new hub for subgraph creation, which also launched Thursday.

An individual signals that a subgraph contains useful information,said Baptiste Greve, product manager at Edge & Node. If others agree on the utility of the subgraph, they too will signal on it. The more signals the subgraph has, the more likely it is to generate query fees that can then be turned into a reward.

You're incentivized to select good subgraphs that are actually being used, said Greve.

While The Graphs release mentions that anyone with a smartphone can now become a curator, Greve notes that an individual will need a Metamask wallet usually obtained as a computer web browser extension to receive payment.

While curators on The Graph protocol may earn revenue, Tal stresses that revenue is based on a bonding curve the relationship between a token supply and price, in which the less token supply, the lower the price and vice versa.

Curators can make or lose money through curation based on the economics of the bonding curve, Tal said. So it's important that curators understand the sub graphs that they're signaling on, as well as the dynamics on those bonding curves.

2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Users of The Graph can now earn money curating blockchain data - The Block Crypto

Pandemic has accelerated the rollout of CBDCs by 5 years, says blockchain firm – Cointelegraph

Research from European blockchain company Guardtime suggests that the current pandemic may have accelerated the launch of a major central bank digital currency by up to five years.

According to Guardtime, the company said the growth of many technology companies, improved use of networking and telecommunications platforms, and digitalization of the world in general could mean the first central bank digital currency, or CBDC, from a major economy could be rolled out within three years. The firm works with several central banks around the world in exploring the development of a CBDC.

There is an increasing sense of a race to the moon regarding central banks launching their own digital currencies, because this could radically enhance their countrys and currencys positions on the global economic stage, said Guardtimes head of strategy Luukas Ilves. Not only has Coronavirus accelerated the digitisation of society, it has also further transformed how we use money.

Ilves said due to many countries enforcing social distancing guidelines and encouraging people to stay at home, the corresponding surge in online transactions seems to have made CBDCs look like a more practical solution for payments. Though he said a government-led move to a CBDC could be slow, gradual and fragmented, central banks are "showing how digital transformation can be done right.

The firm added:

Of the worlds largest economies the United States, China, and Japan China arguably leads the pack for CBDCs, having started piloting trials of its digital yuan in April 2020. In the United States, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said in May the government body would soon be issuing a discussion paper to explore the implementation of a digital dollar. The Bank of Japan has also started a trial of its digital yen scheduled to end in March 2022.

Related: The CBDC promised land: As some governments falter, others press on

According to a study released by consulting giant PwC in April, there are more than 60 central banks currently exploring CBDCs, with each country facing unique challenges for a potential rollout. Guardtime said some of the concerns facing major central banks include whether a CBDC will deliver equal or greater financial security than physical cash, and whether it can offer more functionality than existing commercial banks.

The introduction of central bank digital currencies could upend the global economic order, said the blockchain firm. This technology could bring a multitude of benefits such as more efficient trade, greater financial access for millions of people, and a reduction in crime. But there are important technological barriers to overcome regarding scalability and security.

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Pandemic has accelerated the rollout of CBDCs by 5 years, says blockchain firm - Cointelegraph

Why The Federal Reserve is Fearful of Cryptocurrency and Blockchain – TheStreet

It's not surprising that the powers are a bit jittery around the new digital asset technology.

As the benefits of the new technologies become clear and financial inclusion increases, the ship will have sailed for the Federal Reserve to get fully on board with the new frontier of investing and consumerism.

"The Federal Reserve is afraid of losing its monopoly over the manufacturing of money. These are decentralized communities that have their own economies denominated in money that is not backed by the full faith of credit of the United States, so they are truly bottoms up network effect economies. They are equalizing in a great sense geopolitically, which is why you see that some of the countries that are on the fringes of our financial system who have loans from the IMF in danger of default, like El Salvador, are increasingly looking at cryptocurrencies as a way around that yolk of dollar colonialism that has been tethering them for decades,"said Matthew Sigel, Head of Digital Assets Research at VanEck.

"The Fed is in listening mode and hasn't said much, and the rest of us will wait and see what guidance comes out. But the rest of the world isn't waiting on the Fed... the rest of the world is seeing value in the second source of monetary sovereignty that disintermediates the Fed...we'll see how that shakes out," Sigel added.

The central bank and government are realizing that digital currency gives them more control over transactions and the use of money, and makes it easier to be able to identify illicit transactions in a much better way.

"This is why China is pushing it so aggressively and is truly leading the world in that way... Europe is somewhere behind and the U.S. is somewhat lagging because we are just beginning to talk now about doing it in the future in terms of digital currency,"said Tal Elyashiv, founder and managing partner of SPiCE VC, during a roundtable sponsored by VanEck on the evolution of blockchain.

Watch the full webinar sponsored by VanEck to hear more insight about the evolution of blockchain and how the foundation of crypto Is changing fintech:

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Why The Federal Reserve is Fearful of Cryptocurrency and Blockchain - TheStreet

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang weighs in on the metaverse, blockchain, and chip shortage – VentureBeat

Elevate your enterprise data technology and strategy at Transform 2021.

Conversations with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang are always blunt and illuminating because he still likes to have freewheeling chats with the press. During the recent online-only Computex event, he held a briefing with the press where he talked about the companys recent announcements and then took a lot of questions.

I asked him about the metaverse, the universe of virtual worlds that are all interconnected, like in novels such asSnow CrashandReady Player One. And he gave a detailed answer. Huang addressed a wide range of issues. He talked about Nvidias pending bid to buy Arm for $40 billion, as well as Nvidias effort to create Grace, an Arm-based CPU.

He also addressed progress on Nvidias own Omniverse, dubbed a metaverse for engineers. Huang talked about Nvidias presence in the Chinese market, the companys efforts to discourage miners from buying all of its GPUs, Nvidias data processing units (DPUs), and Moores Laws future and building fabs, competition from Advanced Micro Devices in graphics processing units (GPUs), and Nvidias reaction to the global semiconductor shortage.

I was part of a group of journalists who quizzed Huang. Heres an edited transcript of the group interview.

Above: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti is its new card.

Image Credit: GamesBeat

Jensen Huang: Today Im coming to you from Nvidias new building, called Voyager. This is our new facility. It was started about 2-and-a-half years ago. For the last year-and-a-half, Ive not seen it. Todays my first day on campus. Literally, for our event today, this is my first day on campus. Its beautiful here. This facility is going to be the home of 3,500 Nvidians. Its designed as a city inside a building. If you look behind me, its a sprawling city, and its a very large open space. Its largely naturally lit. In fact, right now, as we speak, theres a light in front of me, but everything behind us is barely lit. The reason for that is because there are all these panels in the sky that let light in.

We simulated this entire building using raytracing on our supercomputer DGX. The reason we did that is so we can balance the amount of light that comes in and the amount of energy, or otherwise heat, that we have to remove with air conditioning. The more light you bring in, the more AC you have to use. The less light you bring in, the more lighting you have to use. We have to simulate that fine balance.

The roof of this building is angled in just the right way such that the morning sun doesnt come straight in, and the afternoon sun doesnt come straight in. The slope of the roof line, the slope of the windows along the side, youll see everything was designed in such a way as to balance between natural light, which is comfortable for the eyes, and not having to use as much air conditioning as otherwise necessary. At the moment, no AC at all. This is the first day weve been in here. Its incredibly comfortable.

Using a supercomputer to simulate architecture, I think this is going to happen for all buildings in the future. Youre going to design a building completely in virtual reality. The building is also designed to accommodate many robots. Youll notice the hallways are very wide. In the future we imagine robots roaming the hallways carrying things to people, but also for telepresence, virtual presence. You can upload yourself into a robot and sit at your desk in your VR or AR headset and roam around the campus.

Youre the first in the world to be here. Welcome all of you, and I thank you for joining me today. I also want to send my thoughts and recognize that in Taiwan, COVID cases are growing again. Im very sorry about that. I hope all of you are safe. I know that Taiwan was so rigorous in keeping the infection rates down, and so Im terribly sorry to see it go up now. I know they can get it under control, and soon all of us will be able to see each other in person.

Let me say a couple of words about the announcement. We announced two basic things. In GeForce gaming, where Taiwan is the central hub of where our add-in card partners and many of our leading laptop partners are based, and the home of, the epicenter if you will, the GeForce ecosystem. It all starts there. Its manufactured and assembled and integrated, and it goes to the market through our add-in card partners and laptop builders.

Above: Nvidias RTX is used in more than 130 games.

Image Credit: Nvidia

The GeForce business is doing incredibly well. The invention of RTX has been a home run. It has reset and redefined computer graphics, completely reinvented modern computer graphics. Its a journey that started more than 10 years ago, and a dream that started 35 years ago. It took that long for us to invent the possibility of doing real-time raytracing, which is really hard to do. It wasnt until we were able to fuse our hardware accelerated raytracing core with the Tensor core GPU, AI processing, and a bunch of new rendering algorithms, that we were able to bring real-time raytracing to reality. RTX has reinvented computer graphics in the marketplace. RTX 30, the 30 family, the Ampere architecture family, has been fantastic.

We announced several things. We announced that we upgraded the RTX 30 family with the 3080Ti and the 3070Ti. Its our regularly planned once per year upgrade to our high end GPUs. We also, with the partnership with all of our laptop partners, our AICs, launched 140 different laptops. Our laptop business is one of the fastest growing businesses in our company. This year we have twice as many notebooks going into the marketplace as we did with Turing, our last generation, RTX 20. This is one of the fastest growing businesses. The laptop business is the fastest growing segment of PCs. Nvidia laptops are growing at seven times the rate of the overall laptop business. It gives a sense of how fast RTX laptops are growing.

If you think about RTX laptops as a game console, its the largest game console in the world. There are more RTX laptops shipped each year than game consoles. If you were to compare the performance of a game console to an RTX, even an RTX 3060 would be 30-50% faster than a PlayStation 5. We have a game console, literally, in this little thin notebook, which is one of the reasons its selling so well. The same laptop also brings with it all of the software stacks and rendering stacks necessary for design applications, like Adobe and Autodesk and all of these wonderful design and creative tools. The RTX laptop, RTX 3080Ti, RTX 3070Ti, and a whole bunch of new games, that was one major announcement.

The second thrust is enterprise, datacenters. As you know, AI is software that can write software. Using machines you can write software that no human possibly can. It can learn from an enormous amount of data using an algorithm in an approach called deep learning. Deep learning isnt just one algorithm. Deep learning is a whole bunch of algorithms. Some for image recognition, some for recognizing 2D to 3D, some for recognizing sequences, some for reinforcement learning in robotics. Theres a whole bunch of different algorithms that are associated with deep learning. But theres no question that we can now write software that weve not been able to write before. We can automate a bunch of things that we never thought would be possible in our generation.

One of the most important things is natural language understanding. Its now so good that you can summarize an entire chapter of a book, or the whole book. Pretty soon you can summarize a movie. Watch the movie, listen to the words, and summarize it in a wonderful way. You can have questions and answers with an NLU model.

AI has made tremendous breakthroughs, but has largely been used by the internet companies, the cloud service providers and internet services. What we announced at GTC initially a few weeks ago, and then what we announced at Computex, is a brand new platform thats called Nvidia Certified AI for Enterprise. Nvidia Certified systems running a software stack we call Nvidia AI Enterprise. The software stack makes it possible to achieve world class capabilities in AI with a bunch of tools and pre-trained AI models. A pre-trained AI model is like a new college grad. They got a bunch of education. Theyre trained. But you have to adapt them into your job and to your profession, your industry. But theyre pre-trained and really smart. Theyre smart at image recognition, at language understanding, and so on.

We have this Nvidia AI Enterprise that sits on top of a body of work that we collaborated on with VMware. That sits on top of Nvidia Certified servers from the worlds leading computer makers, many of them in Taiwan, all over the world, and these are high-volume servers that incorporate our Ampere generation datacenter GPUs and our Mellanox BlueField DPUs. This whole stack gives you a cloud native its like having an AI cloud, but its in your company. It comes with a bunch of tools and capabilities for you to be able to adapt it.

How would you use it? Health care would use it for image recognition in radiology, for example. Retail will use it for automatic checkout. Warehouses and logistics, moving products, tracking inventory automatically. Cities would use these to monitor traffic. Airports would use it in case someone lost baggage, it could instantly find it. There are all kinds of applications for AI in enterprises. I expect enterprise AI, what some people call the industrial edge, will be the largest opportunity of all. Itll be the largest AI opportunity.

With the overall trend, what all of these announcements show is that Nvidia accelerated computing is gaining momentum. We had our company grow a lot last year, as many of you know. This last quarter we had a record quarter across all our product lines. We expect the next quarter to be another great quarter, and the second half also to be a great growth second half. Its very clear that the world of computing is changing, that accelerated computing is making a contribution, and one of the most important applications is AI.

Above: BMW Group is using Nvidias Omniverse to build a digital factory that will mirror a real-world place.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: I wonder about your latest thoughts on the metaverse and how were making progress toward that. Do you see steps happening in the process of creating the metaverse?

Huang: Youve been talking about the metaverse for some time, and youve had interest in this area for a long time. I believe were right on the cusp of it. The metaverse, as you know, for all of you who are learning about it and hearing about it, its a virtual world that connects to the world that we live in. Its a virtual world that is shared by a lot of people. It has real design. It has a real economy. You have a real avatar. That avatar belongs to you and is you. It could be a photoreal avatar of you, or a character.

In these metaverses, youll spend time with your friends. Youll communicate, for example. We could be, in the future, in a metaverse right now. It will be a communications metaverse. It wont be flat. Itll be 3D. Well be able to almost feel like were there with each other. Its how we do time travel. Its how we travel to far places at the speed of light. It could simulate the future. There will be many types of metaverses, and video games are one of them, for example. Fortnite will eventually evolve into a form of metaverse, or some derivative of it. World of Warcraft, you can imagine, will someday evolve into a form of metaverse. There will be video game versions.

There will be AR versions, where the art that you have is a digital art. You own it using NFT. Youll display that beautiful art, thats one of a kind, and its completely digital. Youll have our glasses on or your phone. You can see that its sitting right there, perfectly lit, and it belongs to you. Well see this overlay, a metaverse overlay if you will, into our physical world.

In the world of industry, the example I was giving earlier, this building exists fully in virtual reality. This building completely exists in VR. We designed it completely digitally. Were going to build it out so that there will be a digital twin of this very physical building in VR. Well be able to simulate everything, train our robots in it. We can simulate how best to distribute the air conditioning to reduce the energy consumption. Design certain shapeshifting mechanisms that block sunlight while letting in as much light as possible. We can simulate all of that in our digital twin, our building metaverse, before we deploy anything here in the physical world. Well be able to go in and out of it using VR and AR.

Those are all pieces that have to come together. One of the most important technologies that we have to build, for several of them in the case of consumers, one of the important technologies is AR, and its coming along. AR is important. VR is becoming more accessible and easier to use. Its coming along. In the case of the industrial metaverse, one of the most important technologies is physically based, physically simulated VR environments. An object that you design in the metaverse, if you drop it to the ground, itll fall to the ground, because it obeys the laws of physics. The lighting condition will be exactly as we see. Materials will be simulated physically.

These things are essential components of it, and thats the reason why we invented the Nvidia Omniverse. If you havent had a chance to look at it, its so important. Its one of our most important bodies of work. It combines almost everything that Nvidia has ever built. Omniverse is now in open beta. Its being tested by 400 companies around the world. Its used at BMW to create a digital factory. Its used by WPP, the worlds largest advertising agency. Its used by large simulation architects. Bentley, the worlds largest designer of large infrastructure, they just announced that theyll use Omniverse to create digital twins. Omniverse is very important work, and its worth taking a look at.

Above: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti graphics card.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: You mentioned the opportunities ahead of Nvidia. The recent trend in China is that China has seen a lot of GPU startups emerge in the last one or two years. Its received billions in funding from VCs. China has a lot of reasons to develop its own Nvidia in the next few years. Are you concerned that your Chinese customers are hoping to develop a rival for you in this market?

Huang: Weve had competition, intense competition, from companies that are gigantic, since the founding of our company. What we need to do is we need to make sure we continue to run very fast. Our company is able to invest, in a couple of years, which is one generation, $10 billion to do one thing. After investing in it for 30 years. We have a great deal of expertise and scale. We have the ability to invest greatly. We care deeply about this marketplace. Were going to continue to run very fast. Our companys position, of course, is not certain. We have to take all of the competition, respect them, and take them seriously, and recognize that there are many places where you could contribute to AI. We just have to keep on running hard.

However, heres my prediction. Every datacenter and every server will be accelerated. The GPU is the ideal accelerator for these general purpose applications. There will be hundreds of millions of datacenters. Not just 100 datacenters or 1,000 datacenters, but 100 million. The datacenters will be in retail stores, in 5G base stations, in warehouses, in schools and banks and airports. Theyll be everywhere. Street corners. They will all be datacenters. The market opportunity is quite large. This is the largest market opportunity the IT industry has ever seen. I can understand why it inspires so many competitors. We just need to continue to do our best work and run as fast as we can.

Question: Are you also worried about the government interfering in this space?

Huang: I believe that we add value to the marketplace. Nvidias position in China, and our contribution to China, is good. It has helped the internet companies, helped many startups, helped researchers developing AI. Its wonderful for the gaming business and the design business. We make a lot of contributions to the IT ecosystem in China. I think the government recognizes that. My sense is that were welcome in China and well continue to work hard to deserve to be welcome in China, and every other country for that matter. Well do that.

Above: Nvidias GeForce RTX 3050 will power new laptops.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: Weve seen a few keynotes about games, and weve seen more and more Chinese games, games developed by Chinese companies. How do you position or commend Chinese developers? What does Nvidia plan to do to support the Chinese gaming ecosystem?

Huang: We do several things that developers love. The first thing is our installed base is very big. If youre a developer and you develop on Nvidias platform, because all of our platform, all of our GeForce, are compatible we work so hard to make sure that all of the software is high quality. We maintain and continue to update the software, to keep tuning every single GPU for every game. Every GPU, every game, were constantly tuning. We have a large group of engineers constantly studying and looking for ways to improve. We use our platform called GeForce Experience to update the software for the gamer.

The first thing is our installed base is very large, then. Our software quality is very good. But very important, one of the things that content developers, game developers love is our expertise in computer graphics, working with them to bring beautiful graphics to their games is excellent. Weve invented so many algorithms. We invented programmable shading, as you know. This is almost 20 years ago, we invented the programmable pixel and vertex shaders in the GPU. We invented RTX. We teach people how to use programmable shading to create special effects, how to use RTX to create raytracing and ambient occlusion and global illumination, really beautiful computer graphics. We have a lot of expertise and a lot of technology that we can use to work with gamers to incorporate that into their games so that theyre as beautiful as possible.

When its done, we have fantastic marketing. We have such a large reach, we can help the developers promote their games all over the world. Many of the Chinese developers would like to reach the rest of the world, because their games are now triple-A quality, and they should be able to go all over the world. There are several reasons why game developers enjoy working with us, and those are the reasons.

Above: Nvidias Grace CPU for datacenters is named after Grace Hopper.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: At GTC you announced Grace, which seems like a big project. An Arm CPU is hard to implement. Do you think Arm can overtake the x86 processor in the server market in the future?

Huang: First of all, I think the future world is very diversified. It will be x86. It will be Arm. It will be big CPUs, small CPUs, edge CPUs, datacenter CPUs, supercomputing CPUs, enterprise computing CPUs, lots of CPUs. I think the world is very diversified. There is no one answer.

Our strategy is one where well continue to support the x86 CPUs in the markets we serve. We dont serve every market. We serve high-performance computing. We serve AI. We serve computer graphics. We serve the markets that we serve. For the markets that we serve, not every CPU is perfect, but some CPUs are quite ideal. Depending on the market, and depending on the application, the computing requirements, we will use the right CPU.

Sometimes the right CPU is Intel x86. For example, we have 140 laptops. The vast majority of them are Intel CPUs. We have DGX systems. We need a lot of PCI Express. It was great to use the AMD CPU. In the case of 5G base stations, Marvells CPU is ideal. Theyre based on Arm. Cloud hyperscale, Ampere Computings Altra CPU is excellent. Graviton 2 is excellent. Its fantastic. We support those. In Japan, Fujitsus CPU is incredible for supercomputing. Well support that. Different types of CPUs are designed for different applications.

The CPU we designed has never been designed before. No CPU has ever been able to achieve the level of memory bandwidth and memory capacity that we have designed for. It is designed for big data analytics. Its designed for the state of the art in AI. There are two primary models, or AI models, that we are very interested in advancing, because theyre so important. The first one is the recommender system. Its the most valuable piece of software, approach of software, that the world has ever known. It drives all the internet companies, all the internet services. The recommender system is very important, incredibly important science. Its designed for that. The second is natural language understanding, which requires a lot of memory, a lot of data, to train a very smart AI for having conversational AI, answering questions, making recommendations, and so on.

These two models are probably, my estimation, the most valuable software in the world today. It requires a very large machine. We decided that we would design something just for those types of applications, where big AI is necessary. Meanwhile, there are so many different markets and edges and enterprises and this and that. Well support the CPUs that are right for them. I believe the future is about diversity. I believe the future is about variability and customization and those kinds of things. Arm is a great strategy for us, and x86 will remain a great strategy for us.

Above: Simon Segars is CEO of Arm.

Image Credit: Arm

Question: You recently had the earnings call where you talked a bit about the Arm deal, and Simon Segars keynote mentioned it as well, that hes looking forward to the deal, combining their ecosystem plus all the AI capabilities of Nvidia. Is there any update about the next steps for you guys?

Huang: Were going through the regulatory approval. It takes about 18 months. The process typically goes U.S., then the EC, and then China last. Thats the typical journey. Mellanox took about 18 months, or close to it. I expect this one to take about 18 months. That makes it early next year, or late this year.

Im confident about the transaction. The regulators are looking for, is this good for competition? Is it pro-competitive? Does it bring innovation to the market? Does it give customers more choice? Does it give customers more offerings and more choice? You can see that on first principles, because our companies are completely complementary they build CPUs, we build GPUs and DPUs. They dont build GPUs. Our companies are complementary, and so by nature well bring innovations that come as a result of coming together offering complementary things. Its like ketchup and mustard coming together. Its good for innovation.

Question: You mentioned that the acquisition will increase competition. Can you explain which areas you see for future competition? We see that AMD and also other players are starting to compete in GPUs, CPUs, and datacenters.

Huang: First of all, its pro-competitive because it brings customers more choice. If we combine Nvidia and Arm, Arms R&D scale will be much larger. As you know, Arm is a big company. Its not a small company. But Nvidia is much bigger. Our R&D budget is many times larger than Arms. Our combination will give them more R&D scale. It will give them technology that they dont have the ability to build themselves, or the scale to build themselves, like all of the AI expertise that we have. We can bring those capabilities to Arm and to its market.

As a result of that, we will offer Arm customers more technology choice, better technology, more advanced technology. That ultimately is great for competition, because it allows Arms licensees to create even better products, more vibrant products, better leading-edge technology, which in the end market will give the end market more choice. Thats ultimately the fundamental reason for competition. Its customer choice. More vibrant innovation, more R&D scale, more R&D expertise brings customers more choice. That, I think, is at the core of it.

For us, it brings us a very large ecosystem of developers, which Nvidia as a company, because were an accelerated computing company developers drive our business. And so with 15 million more developers we have more than 30 million developers today those 15 million developers will develop new software that ultimately will create value for our company. Our technology, through their channel, creates value for their company. The combination is a win-win.

Above: Jensen Huang of Nvidia stands in a virtual environment.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: Im interested in your personal thoughts on the weve had all the supply chain constraints on one hand, and then on the other hand a demand surplus when it comes to the crypto world. Whats your feeling? Is it like youre making Ferraris and people are just parking them in the garage revving the engine for the sake of revving it? Do you see an end to proof of work blockchain in the future that might help resolve that issue? What are your thoughts on the push-pull in that space?

Huang: The reason why Ethereum chose our GPUs is because its the largest network of distributed supercomputers in the world. Its programmable. When Bitcoin first came out, it used our GPU. When Ethereum came out it used our GPU. When other cryptocurrencies came out in the beginning, they established their credibility and their viability and integrity with proof of work using algorithms that run on our GPUs. Its ideal. Its the most energy efficient method, the most performant method, the fastest method, and has the benefit of very large distributed networks. Thats the origins of it.

Am I excited about proof of stake? The answers yes. I believe that the demand for Ethereum has reached such a high level that it would be nice for either somebody to come up with an ASIC that does it, or for there to be another method. Ethereum has established itself. It has the opportunity now to implement a second generation that carries on from the platform approach and all of the services that are built on top of it. Its legitimate. Its established. Theres a lot of credibility. It works well. A lot of people depend on it for DeFi and other things. This is a great time for proof of stake to come.

Now, as we go toward that transition, its now established that Ethereum is going to be quite valuable. Theres a future where the processing of these transactions can be a lot faster, and because there are so many people built on top of it now, Ethereum is going to be valuable. In the meantime there will be a lot of coins mined. Thats why we created this new product called CMP. CMP is right here. It looks like this. This is what a CMP looks like. It has no display connectors, as you can probably see.

The CMP is something we learned from the last generation. What we learned is that, first of all CMP does not yield to GeForce. Its not a GeForce put into a different box. It does not yield to our datacenter. It does not yield to our workstations. It doesnt yield to any of our product lines. It has enough functionality that you can use it for crypto mining.

The $150 million we sold last quarter and the $400 million were projecting to sell this quarter essentially increased supply of our company by half a billion dollars. They were supply that we otherwise couldnt use, and we diverted good yielding supply to GeForce gamers, to workstations and such. The first thing is that CMP effectively increases our supply. CMP also has the after benefit of not being able to be resold secondhand to GeForce customers because it doesnt play games. These things we learned from the last cycle, and hopefully we can take some pressure off of the GeForce gaming side, getting more GeForce supply to gamers.

Above: Perlmutter, the largest NVIDIA A100-powered system in the world.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: Theres a shortage problem in the semiconductor market as a whole. The price of GPU products is getting higher. What do you think it will take to stabilize that price?

Huang: Our situation is very different than other peoples situations, as you can imagine. Nvidia doesnt make commodity components. Were not in the DRAM business or the flash business or the CPU business. Our products are not commodity-oriented. Its very specific, for specific applications. In the case of GeForce, for example, we havent raised our price. Our price is basically the same. We have an MSRP. The channel end market prices are higher because demand is so strong.

Our strategy is to alleviate, to reduce the high demand that is caused by crypto mining, and create a special product, the CMP, directly for the crypto miners. If the crypto miners can buy, directly from us, a large volume of GPUs, and they dont yield to GeForce, so they cannot be used for GeForce, but they can be used for crypto mining, it will discourage them from buying from the open market.

The second reason is we introduced new GeForce configurations that reduce the hash rate for crypto mining. We reduced the performance of our GPU on purpose so that if you would like to buy a GPU for gaming, you can. If youd like to buy a GPU for crypto mining, either you can buy the CMP version, or if you really would like to use the GeForce to do it, unfortunately the performance will be reduced. This allows us to save our GPUs for the gamers, and hopefully, as a result, the pricing will slowly come down.

In terms of supply, its the case that the worlds technology industry has reshaped itself. As you know, cloud computing is growing very fast. In the cloud, the datacenters are so big. The chips can be very powerful. Thats why die size, chip size continues to grow. The amount of leading-edge process it consumes is growing. Also, smartphones are using state of the art technology. The leading-edge process consumption used to see some distribution, but now the distribution is heavily skewed toward the leading edge. Technology is moving faster and faster.

The shape of the semiconductor industry changed because of these dynamics. In our case, we have demand that exceeds our supply. Thats for sure. However, as you saw from our last quarters performance, we have enough supply to grow significantly year over year. We have enough supply to grow in Q2 as we guided. We have enough supply to grow in the second half. However, I do wish we had more supply. We have enough supply to grow and grow very nicely. Were very thankful for all of our supply chain and our partners supporting us. But the world is going to be reshaped because of cloud computing, because of the way that computing is going.

Question: When do you think the ongoing chip shortage problem could be solved?

Huang: It just depends on degree and for whom. As you know, we grew tremendously year over year. We announced a great quarter last year. Record quarter for GeForce, for workstations, for datacenters. Although demand was even higher than that, we had enough supply to grow quite nicely year over year. Well grow in Q2. Well grow in the second half. We have supply to do that.

However, there are several dynamics that I think are foundational to our growth. RTX has reset computer graphics. Everyone who has a GTX is looking to upgrade to RTX. RTX is going to reset workstation graphics. There are 45 million designers and creators in the world, and growing. They used to use GTX, but now obviously everyone wants to move to RTX so they can do raytracing in real time. We have this pent-up demand because we reset and reinvented computer graphics. Thats going to drive our demand for some time. It will be several years of pent-up demand that needs to re-upgrade.

In the datacenter its because of AI, because of accelerated computing. You need it for AI and deep learning. We now add to it what I believe will be the long term biggest AI market, which is enterprise industries. Health care is going to be large. Manufacturing, transportation. These are the largest industries in the world. Even agriculture. Retail. Warehouses and logistics. These are giant industries, and they will all be based on AI to achieve productivity and capabilities for their customers.

Now we have that new platform that we just announced at Computex. We have many years of very exciting growth ahead of us. Well just keep working with our supply chain to inform them about the changing world of IT, so that they can be better prepared for the demand thats coming in the future. But I believe that the areas that were in, the markets that were in, because we have very specific reasons, will have rich demand for some time to come.

Above: AI algorithms were developed on Nvidia DGX servers at a U.S. Postal Service Engineering facility.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: I see that AMD just announced bringing their RDNA 2 to Arm-based SOCs, collaborating with Samsung to bring raytracing and VR features to Android-based devices. Will there be some further plan from Nvidia to bring RTX technology to consumer devices with Arm-based CPUs?

Huang: Maybe. You know that we build lots of Arm SOCs. We build Arm SOCs for robotics, for the Nintendo Switch, for our self-driving cars. Were very good at building Arm SOCs. The Arm consumer market, I believe, especially for PCs and raytracing games raytracing games are quite large, to be honest. The data set is quite large. There will be a time for it. When the time is right we might consider it. But in the meantime we use our SOCs for autonomous vehicles, autonomous machines, robots, and for Android devices we bring the best games using GeForce Now.

As you know, GeForce Now has more than 10 million gamers on it now. Its in 70 countries. Were about to bring it to the southern hemisphere. Im excited about that. It has 1,000 games, 300 publishers, and it streams in Taiwan. I hope youre using it in Taiwan. Thats how wed like to reach Android devices, Chrome devices, iOS devices, MacOS devices, Linux devices, all kinds of devices, whether its on TV or a mobile device. For us, right now, thats the best strategy.

Above: Jensen Huang of Nvidia holds the worlds largest graphics card.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Question: I wanted to ask you about die size. Obviously with Moores Law, it seems we have the choice of using Moores Law to either shrink the die size or pack more transistors in. In the next few generations, the next three years or so, do you see die sizes shrinking, or do you think theyll stay stable, or even rise again?

Huang: Since the beginning of time, transistor time, die sizes have grown and grown. Theres no question die sizes are increasing. Because technology cycles are increasing in pace, new products are being introduced every year. Theres no time to cost reduce into smaller die sizes. If you look at the trend, its unquestionably to the upper right. If you look at the application space that we see, talking very specifically about us, if you look at our die sizes, there are always reticle limits now. The reticle limits are pretty spectacular. We cant fit another transistor. Thats why we have to use multi-chip packing, of course. We created NVLink to put a bunch of them together. Theres all kinds of strategies to increase the effective die size.

One of the important things is that cloud datacenters so much of the computing experience you have on your phone is because of computers in the cloud. The cloud is a much bigger place. The datacenters are larger. The electricity is more abundant. The cooling system is better. The die size can be very large. Die size is going to continue to grow, even as transistors continue to shrink.

Question: Its expensive to spin up fabs, but in light of the prolonged silicon crunch, is that on the horizon for Nvidia to consider, spinning up a fab for yourself?

Huang: No. Boy, thats the shortest answer Ive had all night. Its the only answer I know, completely. The reason for that, you know theres a difference between a kitchen and a restaurant. Theres a difference between a fab and a foundry. I can spin up a fab, no doubt, just like I can spin up a kitchen, but it wont be a good restaurant. You can spin up a fab, but it wont be a good foundry.

A foundry is a service-oriented business that combines service, agility, technology, capacity, courage, intuition about the future. Its a lot of stuff. The business is not easy. What TSMC does for a living is not easy. Its not going to get any easier, and its not getting easier. Its getting harder. There are so many people who are so good at what they do. Theres no reason for us to go repeating that. We should encourage them to develop the necessary capacity for our platforms benefit.

Meanwhile, they now realize that the leading-edge consumption, leading-edge wafer consumption, the shape has changed because of the way the computing industry is evolving. They see the opportunity in front of them. Theyre racing as fast as they can to increase capacity. I dont think theres anything I can do, that a fabless semiconductor company can do, that can possibly catch up to any of them. So the answer is no.

Above: Nvidias Clara AI for COVID-19 diagnosis from CT scans.

Image Credit: Nvidia

Link:

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang weighs in on the metaverse, blockchain, and chip shortage - VentureBeat

As blockchain becomes widely used in banking, what are its security risks? – Forkast News

Today, everybody understands the importance of investing in technology and the surplus returns it brings. Blockchain is currently one of the hottest technologies on the market.

Not only have investors made their fair share of investments in blockchain for the first time ever, but investment banks also now issue bonds using this technology.

Blockchain technology is a form of decentralized database that stores information in blocks that are chained together. It computes, stores and analyzes data stored in this database and functions differently from the traditional centralized database in very specific ways.

Blockchain is decentralized because no single individual controls the information within the database or network. It is accessible to anyone around the world to command or access.

Every piece of information sent into it is stored in a new block until that block is filled with data. Then it is chained to the preceding block to link them chronologically.

It is mainly used as a ledger for transactions because every bit of information sent to it can never be erased or tampered with, making it a transparent platform for carrying out payments.

For cryptocurrency, blockchain is used in a decentralized way so that no single individual can have control over the information about cryptocurrency that is being inputted into the network. The data is permanently recorded and viewable by all.

Blockchain technology in the banking and finance sector is becoming paramount and sought-after now because of the benefits and opportunities it presents.

But as the digital world expands and evolves, cybercriminals are also developing new tools to remove blocks from their way. This is why banks have seen the need to be a step ahead of the game.

With blockchain technology, disbursing and receiving funds becomes decentralized. This spells a lot of things for the banking industry:

There is a reduction in fraudulent crimes and activities because the decentralized database is less susceptible to data breaches, hacking or the figures tampered with. This also means a more transparent system of banking too.

Blockchain technology spells an improvement in the speed at which banks will send payments since it runs on real-time payment executions.

It is also helpful for spotting foul play in banking activities and quickly identifying criminal dealings.

Blockchain also ensures there are little to no human errors because the information sent to the blockchain cannot be erased, modified or tampered with. It is also available for everyone to see.

Banks have steadily started to integrate blockchain technology into some of their processes. We see the first of its kind in investment banking, with the European Investment Bank (EIB).

In April 2021, EIB further stamped the interests of the capital market in bringing in blockchain technology in its processes when it registered a two-year digital bond in the public Ethereum blockchain network.

This action was welcomed with a -0.601% yield, sending Ether, one of the worlds largest cryptocurrencies, to a record high. This digital bond yielded over US$120 million (100 million euros), which the funding officials at the bank confirmed to be the first time it was making such a sale.

Of course, this move indicates many things for the capital market and its investment processes.

Blockchain comes on the capital market to make the issuance of bonds and other securities smoother and more convenient. Although blockchain was initially created for decentralizing Bitcoin, capital market players are starting to see it as the solution to the capital markets challenges.

Before now, raising capital in the market traditionally was not only expensive but tedious and yielded only little results. With blockchain, it is obvious there would be a turnaround in the capital market. Blockchain would boost transparency of the bonds and securities issuance process and still reduce expenses and time.

Officials at the EIB believe that the introduction of blockchain technology and its benefits are a game changer for the capital market.

However, fully adopting and switching to this technology has not been the easiest, seeing as the EIB has devoted a lot of work and effort since 2019 to put in the issuance.

Surely, blockchain takes care of the many risks of fraud and criminal activities in the banking industry, but what risks do using blockchain technology pose for the industry?

While blockchain technology may be the future of investment banking and other finance industry sectors, it remains pertinent not to discard the cybersecurity risks it may present. Adequate preparation to prevent these risks is vital to avoid colossal loss of securities for investors and shareholders.

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As blockchain becomes widely used in banking, what are its security risks? - Forkast News

‘Blockchain technology has the potential to have a greater impact on our lives than the internet’ – ArabianBusiness

What are some common misconceptions you see around the blockchain?

One of the biggest problems that I see currently is that everybodys focused on cryptocurrencies rather than the blockchain itself. They also tend to look at it from a more speculative angle to get fast gains. There are a lot of good projects and a lot of good cryptocurrencies, but there are a lot of bad ones and a lot that its not advisable for people to invest in long term.

That said, I do think that blockchain technology has the potential to have a greater impact on our lives than the internet has.

What is Velas doing in this area?

We have our own proprietary blockchain, which is code based off Solana. We have the fastest blockchain in the world because we offload most of the capacity on to the hardware itself, so were able to reach unprecedented speeds in the blockchain of up to 70,000 transactions per second when Ethereum only does 40,000 and Bitcoin only does 4,000.

On top of that, weve built Ethereum virtual machine compatibility into the Velas blockchain, which means all the applications that were built on Ethereum can now migrate seamlessly on to Velas, and can benefit from our very fast speeds and very cheap transaction fees.

Were essentially building a whole ecosystem. We provide a big platform for a number of decentralised applications (DAPS) to be built on top of us.

What industries do you feel are ripe for blockchain disruption?

As I said, the blockchain sector will disrupt a whole lot of industries, especially telecommunications, energy transfusion, transportation, logistics and government services. What the blockchain is meant to do is eliminate the middle man, and facilitate end point to end point transactions or data communication. In all these sectors, I think the blockchain will be very relevant and will increase efficiency.

What are you doing with NFTs?

We have NFT platforms from the region and from outside that are starting to build on top of us. Were giving them full support on the integration, sharing our community, our knowledge and our developers experience. Here in the region, my partner did an event, painting his car at the Dubai

Opera with a famous Saudi artist. Hes going to do a NFT through a local auction house, with half of the proceeds going to charities around the world, specifically Amazonian indigenous communities.

What are your thoughts on Bitcoin as an asset?

For me, Bitcoin is the equivalent of digital gold. Its a transfer of value, not so much a payment system. Because of its architecture, the Bitcoin blockchain is heavy and slow but it is a very good store of value because there is only a finite amount of Bitcoin that can ever be produced.

The cryptocurrency market has always been volatile. However, as its getting more adoption, going more mainstream with bigger financial institutions coming on board, there will be less and less fluctuation. Right now, there is still a lot to do with regulation. Also, we had the infamous Elon Musk tweets that had some impact on the market. That said, the big crypto whales have accumulated more than $5.5 billion worth when the price dipped, so that should tell you a little bit about where the market should be going next.

When did you first get involved with the blockchain?

I was first introduced to the space in 2016. Once you understand what blockchain and cryptocurrency are, its hard to stop digging and looking more and more into it. My first professional experience would be that we created in 2017 with our wealth management company the first crypto international security identification number (ISIN) one of the first Bitcoin products that could be bought by institutions, because thats where I thought that was going.

But 2017 was the year of initial coin offerings (ICOs) and then in 2018 we entered a bear market. Right now youre seeing more and more of these types of products coming out. The market has only just matured for financial instruments with cryptocurrencies.

Weve done a bunch of other things in the space partnered with numerous companies, ran very large events during the World Economic Forum in Davos, and have ended up being the co-founder of what is now a fourth-generation blockchain company.

What is the importance of scalability in the blockchain space?

This is really important in the space, because as second-generation blockchain, Ethereum has shown us that smart contracts and giving a platform and toolset where communities can build applications is great and fundamentally important. But Ethereum cannot scale to the point of having billions of users the cost of transactions is too high and its just not scalable to that point.

For us, scalability is very important in order to have real-life real cases of using the blockchain in the real world. I think scalability in Velas really can provide that to big industries and all types of different segments of the economy, because transactions have to be cheap and they have to be fast.

Whats your advice to people who missed the first Bitcoin train but want to board the next one?

Always do your own research. Dont be afraid to do the research the informations out there on social media and YouTube. Theres a lot you can learn, and most people in this industry are self-taught.

Dont look at the noise and hype. How we look at projects is by looking at their team, their vision and their core competencies. Thats how we invest in or try to partner with projects that are looking long term and solving some concrete issues.

Just be careful out there and dont invest what you arent afraid of losing.

Brand View allows our business partners to share content with Arabian Business readers.The content is supplied by Arabian Business Brand View Partners.

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'Blockchain technology has the potential to have a greater impact on our lives than the internet' - ArabianBusiness

Maiden Government Blockchain Association Ireland Event to Focus on Blockchain, Identity – Crowdfund Insider

The Government Blockchain Association (GBA) has scheduled its first event in Ireland for 2 p.m. local time (8 a.m. eastern) on June 24. The topics of blockchain and identity will be discussed on Zoom.

The GBA is an international nonprofit association focused on promoting blockchain technology to government while being agnostic to specific solutions. Based in Fairfax, Va, the GBA is open to government employees, private sector professionals and corporations. Fees for government employees are waived. Their goal is to create links between technologists, public policymakers, application specialists, and others interested in digital currencies.

Host Simon Cocking said blockchain technology can propel identity security.

Blockchain technology can help to protect sensitive information. With the power of blockchain-based identity we can transform how our data is used across many industries: finance, banking, travel and healthcare are just a few industries that can use this breakthrough technology. It can help to map your physical identity to your digital footprint, allowing for reduced checks for proof of identification and enabling easier management of records and certificates.

Cocking will be joined by Rob Leslie, founder and CEO of Sedicii, developers of a global identity network; Shiv Aggarwal, founder and CEO of decentralized identity management providers EarthId; AdamBouktila, founder and CEO of digital marketplace DMerch.io and lecturer Paula Marie Kilgarriff, whose interests focus on global retail innovation and emerging technologies.

Digital Identity has the power to fundamentally change peoples lives for the better but it is not without risks, Leslie said. What is at stake is your privacy, your financial security and ultimately who you are as person. Are we ready for it?

GBA Ireland is led by Jillian Godsil and Lisa Gibbons

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Maiden Government Blockchain Association Ireland Event to Focus on Blockchain, Identity - Crowdfund Insider

Blockchain – Wikipedia

Distributed data store for digital transactions

A blockchain is a growing list of records, called blocks, that are linked together using cryptography.[1][2][3][4] Each block contains a cryptographic hash of the previous block, a timestamp, and transaction data (generally represented as a Merkle tree). The timestamp proves that the transaction data existed when the block was published in order to get into its hash. As blocks each contain information about the block previous to it, they form a chain, with each additional block reinforcing the ones before it. Therefore, blockchains are resistant to modification of their data because once recorded, the data in any given block cannot be altered retroactively without altering all subsequent blocks.

Blockchains are typically managed by a peer-to-peer network for use as a publicly distributed ledger, where nodes collectively adhere to a protocol to communicate and validate new blocks. Although blockchain records are not unalterable as forks are possible, blockchains may be considered secure by design and exemplify a distributed computing system with high Byzantine fault tolerance.[5]

The blockchain was invented by a person (or group of people) using the name Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008 to serve as the public transaction ledger of the cryptocurrency bitcoin.[3] The identity of Satoshi Nakamoto remains unknown to date. The invention of the blockchain for bitcoin made it the first digital currency to solve the double-spending problem without the need of a trusted authority or central server. The bitcoin design has inspired other applications[3][2] and blockchains that are readable by the public and are widely used by cryptocurrencies. The blockchain is considered a type of payment rail.[6] Private blockchains have been proposed for business use but Computerworld called the marketing of such privatized blockchains without a proper security model "snake oil".[7] However, others have argued that permissioned blockchains, if carefully designed, may be more decentralized and therefore more secure in practice than permissionless ones.[4][8]

Cryptographer David Chaum first proposed a blockchain-like protocol in his 1982 dissertation "Computer Systems Established, Maintained, and Trusted by Mutually Suspicious Groups."[9] Further work on a cryptographically secured chain of blocks was described in 1991 by Stuart Haber and W. Scott Stornetta.[4][10] They wanted to implement a system wherein document timestamps could not be tampered with. In 1992, Haber, Stornetta, and Dave Bayer incorporated Merkle trees to the design, which improved its efficiency by allowing several document certificates to be collected into one block.[4][11]

The first blockchain was conceptualized by a person (or group of people) known as Satoshi Nakamoto in 2008. Nakamoto improved the design in an important way using a Hashcash-like method to timestamp blocks without requiring them to be signed by a trusted party and introducing a difficulty parameter to stabilize rate with which blocks are added to the chain.[4] The design was implemented the following year by Nakamoto as a core component of the cryptocurrency bitcoin, where it serves as the public ledger for all transactions on the network.[3]

In August 2014, the bitcoin blockchain file size, containing records of all transactions that have occurred on the network, reached 20GB (gigabytes).[12] In January 2015, the size had grown to almost 30GB, and from January 2016 to January 2017, the bitcoin blockchain grew from 50GB to 100GB in size. The ledger size had exceeded 200 GiB by early 2020.[13]

The words block and chain were used separately in Satoshi Nakamoto's original paper, but were eventually popularized as a single word, blockchain, by 2016.

According to Accenture, an application of the diffusion of innovations theory suggests that blockchains attained a 13.5% adoption rate within financial services in 2016, therefore reaching the early adopters phase.[14] Industry trade groups joined to create the Global Blockchain Forum in 2016, an initiative of the Chamber of Digital Commerce.

In May 2018, Gartner found that only 1% of CIOs indicated any kind of blockchain adoption within their organisations, and only 8% of CIOs were in the short-term "planning or [looking at] active experimentation with blockchain".[15] For the year 2019 Gartner reported 5% of CIOs believed blockchain technology was a 'game-changer' for their business.[16]

A blockchain is a decentralized, distributed, and oftentimes public, digital ledger consisting of records called blocks that is used to record transactions across many computers so that any involved block cannot be altered retroactively, without the alteration of all subsequent blocks.[3][17] This allows the participants to verify and audit transactions independently and relatively inexpensively.[18] A blockchain database is managed autonomously using a peer-to-peer network and a distributed timestamping server. They are authenticated by mass collaboration powered by collective self-interests.[19] Such a design facilitates robust workflow where participants' uncertainty regarding data security is marginal. The use of a blockchain removes the characteristic of infinite reproducibility from a digital asset. It confirms that each unit of value was transferred only once, solving the long-standing problem of double spending. A blockchain has been described as a value-exchange protocol.[20] A blockchain can maintain title rights because, when properly set up to detail the exchange agreement, it provides a record that compels offer and acceptance.

Logically, a blockchain can be seen as consisting of several layers:[21]

Blocks hold batches of valid transactions that are hashed and encoded into a Merkle tree.[3] Each block includes the cryptographic hash of the prior block in the blockchain, linking the two. The linked blocks form a chain.[3] This iterative process confirms the integrity of the previous block, all the way back to the initial block, which is known as the genesis block.[22]

Sometimes separate blocks can be produced concurrently, creating a temporary fork. In addition to a secure hash-based history, any blockchain has a specified algorithm for scoring different versions of the history so that one with a higher score can be selected over others. Blocks not selected for inclusion in the chain are called orphan blocks.[22] Peers supporting the database have different versions of the history from time to time. They keep only the highest-scoring version of the database known to them. Whenever a peer receives a higher-scoring version (usually the old version with a single new block added) they extend or overwrite their own database and retransmit the improvement to their peers. There is never an absolute guarantee that any particular entry will remain in the best version of the history forever. Blockchains are typically built to add the score of new blocks onto old blocks and are given incentives to extend with new blocks rather than overwrite old blocks. Therefore, the probability of an entry becoming superseded decreases exponentially[23] as more blocks are built on top of it, eventually becoming very low.[3][24]:ch. 08[25] For example, bitcoin uses a proof-of-work system, where the chain with the most cumulative proof-of-work is considered the valid one by the network. There are a number of methods that can be used to demonstrate a sufficient level of computation. Within a blockchain the computation is carried out redundantly rather than in the traditional segregated and parallel manner.[26]

The block time is the average time it takes for the network to generate one extra block in the blockchain. Some blockchains create a new block as frequently as every five seconds.[27] By the time of block completion, the included data becomes verifiable. In cryptocurrency, this is practically when the transaction takes place, so a shorter block time means faster transactions. The block time for Ethereum is set to between 14 and 15 seconds, while for bitcoin it is on average 10 minutes.[28]

A hard fork is a rule change such that the software validating according to the old rules will see the blocks produced according to the new rules as invalid. In case of a hard fork, all nodes meant to work in accordance with the new rules need to upgrade their software. If one group of nodes continues to use the old software while the other nodes use the new software, a permanent split can occur.

For example, Ethereum has hard-forked to "make whole" the investors in The DAO, which had been hacked by exploiting a vulnerability in its code. In this case, the fork resulted in a split creating Ethereum and Ethereum Classic chains. In 2014 the Nxt community was asked to consider a hard fork that would have led to a rollback of the blockchain records to mitigate the effects of a theft of 50 million NXT from a major cryptocurrency exchange. The hard fork proposal was rejected, and some of the funds were recovered after negotiations and ransom payment. Alternatively, to prevent a permanent split, a majority of nodes using the new software may return to the old rules, as was the case of bitcoin split on 12 March 2013.[29]

By storing data across its peer-to-peer network, the blockchain eliminates a number of risks that come with data being held centrally.[3] The decentralized blockchain may use ad hoc message passing and distributed networking. One risk of a lack of a decentralization is a so-called "51% attack" where a central entity can gain control of more than half of a network and can manipulate that specific blockchain record at-will, allowing double-spending.[32]

Peer-to-peer blockchain networks lack centralized points of vulnerability that computer crackers can exploit; likewise, it has no central point of failure. Blockchain security methods include the use of public-key cryptography.[33]:5 A public key (a long, random-looking string of numbers) is an address on the blockchain. Value tokens sent across the network are recorded as belonging to that address. A private key is like a password that gives its owner access to their digital assets or the means to otherwise interact with the various capabilities that blockchains now support. Data stored on the blockchain is generally considered incorruptible.[3]

Every node in a decentralized system has a copy of the blockchain. Data quality is maintained by massive database replication[34] and computational trust. No centralized "official" copy exists and no user is "trusted" more than any other.[33] Transactions are broadcast to the network using software. Messages are delivered on a best-effort basis. Mining nodes validate transactions,[22] add them to the block they are building, and then broadcast the completed block to other nodes.[24]:ch. 08 Blockchains use various time-stamping schemes, such as proof-of-work, to serialize changes.[35] Alternative consensus methods include proof-of-stake.[22] Growth of a decentralized blockchain is accompanied by the risk of centralization because the computer resources required to process larger amounts of data become more expensive.[36]

Open blockchains are more user-friendly than some traditional ownership records, which, while open to the public, still require physical access to view. Because all early blockchains were permissionless, controversy has arisen over the blockchain definition. An issue in this ongoing debate is whether a private system with verifiers tasked and authorized (permissioned) by a central authority should be considered a blockchain.[37][38][39][40][41] Proponents of permissioned or private chains argue that the term "blockchain" may be applied to any data structure that batches data into time-stamped blocks. These blockchains serve as a distributed version of multiversion concurrency control (MVCC) in databases.[42] Just as MVCC prevents two transactions from concurrently modifying a single object in a database, blockchains prevent two transactions from spending the same single output in a blockchain.[43]:3031 Opponents say that permissioned systems resemble traditional corporate databases, not supporting decentralized data verification, and that such systems are not hardened against operator tampering and revision.[37][39] Nikolai Hampton of Computerworld said that "many in-house blockchain solutions will be nothing more than cumbersome databases," and "without a clear security model, proprietary blockchains should be eyed with suspicion."[7][44]

An advantage to an open, permissionless, or public, blockchain network is that guarding against bad actors is not required and no access control is needed.[23] This means that applications can be added to the network without the approval or trust of others, using the blockchain as a transport layer.[23]

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies currently secure their blockchain by requiring new entries to include a proof of work. To prolong the blockchain, bitcoin uses Hashcash puzzles. While Hashcash was designed in 1997 by Adam Back, the original idea was first proposed by Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naor and Eli Ponyatovski in their 1992 paper "Pricing via Processing or Combatting Junk Mail".

In 2016, venture capital investment for blockchain-related projects was weakening in the USA but increasing in China.[45] Bitcoin and many other cryptocurrencies use open (public) blockchains. As of April2018[update], bitcoin has the highest market capitalization.

Permissioned blockchains use an access control layer to govern who has access to the network.[46] In contrast to public blockchain networks, validators on private blockchain networks are vetted by the network owner. They do not rely on anonymous nodes to validate transactions nor do they benefit from the network effect.[citation needed] Permissioned blockchains can also go by the name of 'consortium' blockchains.[citation needed] It has been argued that permissioned blockchains can guarantee a certain level of decentralization, if carefully designed, as opposed to permissionless blockchains, which are often centralized in practice.[8]

Nikolai Hampton pointed out in Computerworld that "There is also no need for a '51 percent' attack on a private blockchain, as the private blockchain (most likely) already controls 100 percent of all block creation resources. If you could attack or damage the blockchain creation tools on a private corporate server, you could effectively control 100 percent of their network and alter transactions however you wished."[7] This has a set of particularly profound adverse implications during a financial crisis or debt crisis like the financial crisis of 200708, where politically powerful actors may make decisions that favor some groups at the expense of others,[47][48] and "the bitcoin blockchain is protected by the massive group mining effort. It's unlikely that any private blockchain will try to protect records using gigawatts of computing power it's time consuming and expensive."[7] He also said, "Within a private blockchain there is also no 'race'; there's no incentive to use more power or discover blocks faster than competitors. This means that many in-house blockchain solutions will be nothing more than cumbersome databases."[7]

The analysis of public blockchains has become increasingly important with the popularity of bitcoin, Ethereum, litecoin and other cryptocurrencies.[49] A blockchain, if it is public, provides anyone who wants access to observe and analyse the chain data, given one has the know-how. The process of understanding and accessing the flow of crypto has been an issue for many cryptocurrencies, crypto-exchanges and banks.[50][51] The reason for this is accusations of blockchain enabled cryptocurrencies enabling illicit dark market trade of drugs, weapons, money laundering etc.[52] A common belief has been that cryptocurrency is private and untraceable, thus leading many actors to use it for illegal purposes. This is changing and now specialised tech-companies provide blockchain tracking services, making crypto exchanges, law-enforcement and banks more aware of what is happening with crypto funds and fiat crypto exchanges. The development, some argue, has led criminals to prioritise use of new cryptos such as Monero.[53][54][55] The question is about public accessibility of blockchain data and the personal privacy of the very same data. It is a key debate in cryptocurrency and ultimately in blockchain.[56]

Blockchain technology can be integrated into multiple areas. The primary use of blockchains today is as a distributed ledger for cryptocurrencies, most notably bitcoin. Starting from mid-2016, Blockchains have found close operational relevance to the field of Logistics and e-votings.

There are a few operational products maturing from proof of concept by late 2016.[45] Businesses have been thus far reluctant to place blockchain at the core of the business structure.[57] Although businesses have been reluctant to fully implement blockchain, many have begun testing the technology and are conducting low-level implementation to gauge its effects on organizational efficiency.

In 2019, it was estimated that around $2.9 billion were invested in blockchain technology, which represents an 89% increase from the year prior. Additionally, the International Data Corp has estimated that corporate investment into blockchain technology will reach $12.4 billion by 2022.[58] Furthermore, According to PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), the second-largest professional services network in the world, blockchain technology has the potential to generate an annual business value of more than $3 trillion by 2030. PwC's estimate is further augmented by a 2018 study that they have conducted, in which PwC surveyed 600 business executives and determined that 84% have at least some exposure to utilizing blockchain technology, which indicts a significant demand and interest in blockchain technology.[59]

Individual use of blockchain technology has also greatly increased since 2016. According to statistics in 2020, there were more than 40 million blockchain wallets in 2020 in comparison to around 10 million blockchain wallets in 2016.[60]

Most cryptocurrencies use blockchain technology to record transactions. For example, the bitcoin network and Ethereum network are both based on blockchain. On 8 May 2018 Facebook confirmed that it would open a new blockchain group[61] which would be headed by David Marcus, who previously was in charge of Messenger. Facebook's planned cryptocurrency platform, Libra (now known as Diem), was formally announced on June 18, 2019.[62][63]

The criminal enterprise Silk Road, which operated on Tor, utilized cryptocurrency for payments, some of which the US federal government has seized through research on the blockchain and forfeiture.[64]

Governments have mixed policies on the legality of their citizens or banksowning cryptocurrencies. China implements blockchain technology in several industries including a national digital currency which launched in 2020.[65][66] In order to strengthen their respective currencies, Western governments including the European Union and the United States have initiated similar projects.[67]

Blockchain-based smart contracts are proposed contracts that can be partially or fully executed or enforced without human interaction.[68] One of the main objectives of a smart contract is automated escrow. A key feature of smart contracts is that they do not need a trusted third party (such as a trustee) to act as an intermediary between contracting entities -the blockchain network executes the contract on its own. This may reduce friction between entities when transferring value and could subsequently open the door to a higher level of transaction automation.[69] An IMF staff discussion reported that smart contracts based on blockchain technology might reduce moral hazards and optimize the use of contracts in general. But "no viable smart contract systems have yet emerged." Due to the lack of widespread use their legal status is unclear.[70][71]

According to Reason, many banks have expressed interest in implementing distributed ledgers for use in banking and are cooperating with companies creating private blockchains,[72][73][74] and according to a September 2016 IBM study, this is occurring faster than expected.[75]

Banks are interested in this technology because it has potential to speed up back office settlement systems.[76]

Banks such as UBS are opening new research labs dedicated to blockchain technology in order to explore how blockchain can be used in financial services to increase efficiency and reduce costs.[77][78]

Berenberg, a German bank, believes that blockchain is an "overhyped technology" that has had a large number of "proofs of concept", but still has major challenges, and very few success stories.[79]

In December 2018, Bitwala launched Europe's first regulated blockchain banking solution that enables users to manage both their bitcoin and euro deposits in one place with the safety and convenience of a German bank account. The bank account is hosted by the Berlin-based solarisBank.[80]

Mojaloop is designed to deliver financial support to people living in areas underserved by banks. It of use to migrants sending remittances[81]

Tokenization of stocks is also occurring[82] and some cryptocurrency exchanges are already offering so-called "stock tokens".[83]

The blockchain has also given rise to Initial coin offerings (ICOs) as well as a new category of digital asset called Security Token Offerings (STOs), also sometimes referred to as Digital Security Offerings (DSOs).[84] STO/DSOs may be conducted privately or on a public, regulated stock exchange and are used to tokenize traditional assets such as company shares as well as more innovative ones like intellectual property, real estate, art, or individual products. A number of companies are active in this space providing services for compliant tokenization, private STOs, and public STOs.

A blockchain game CryptoKitties, launched in November 2017.[85] The game made headlines in December 2017 when a cryptokitty character - an in-game virtual pet - was sold for more than US$100,000.[86] CryptoKitties illustrated scalability problems for games on Ethereum when it created significant congestion on the Ethereum network with about 30% of all Ethereum transactions being for the game.[87]

CryptoKitties also demonstrated how blockchains can be used to catalog game assets (digital assets).[88]

Blockchain is also being used in peer-to-peer energy trading.[89][90][91]

There have been several different efforts to employ blockchains in supply chain management.

Blockchain could be used in detecting counterfeits by associating unique identifiers to products, documents and shipments, and storing records associated to transactions that cannot be forged or altered.[98][99] It is however argued that blockchain technology needs to be supplemented with technologies that provide a strong binding between physical objects and blockchain systems.[100] The EUIPO established an Anti-Counterfeiting Blockathon Forum, with the objective of "defining, piloting and implementing" an anti-counterfeiting infrastructure at the European level.[101][102] The Dutch Standardisation organisation NEN uses blockchain together with QR Codes to authenticate certificates.[103]

In response to the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, The Wall Street Journal reported that Ernst & Young was working on a blockchain to help employers, governments, airlines and others keep track of people who have had antibody tests and could be immune to the virus. Hospitals and vendors also utilized a blockchain for needed medical equipment. Additionally, blockchain technology was being used in China to speed up the time it takes for health insurance payments to be paid to health-care providers and patients.[104]

There are several different efforts to offer domain name services via blockchain. These domain names can be controlled by the use of a private key, which purport to allow for uncensorable websites. This would also bypass a registrar's ability to suppress domains used for fraud, abuse, or illegal content.[105]

Namecoin is a cryptocurrency that supports the ".bit" top-level domain (TLD). Namecoin was forked from bitcoin in 2011. The .bit TLD is not sanctioned by ICANN, instead requiring an alternative DNS root.[105] As of 2015, it was used by 28 websites, out of 120,000 registered names.[106] Namecoin was dropped by OpenNIC in 2019, due to malware and potential other legal issues.[107] Other blockchain alternatives to ICANN include The Handshake Network,[106] EmerDNS, and Unstoppable Domains.[105]

Specific TLDs include ".eth", ".luxe", and ".kred", which are associated with the Ethereum blockchain through the Ethereum Name Service (ENS). The .kred TLD also acts an alternative to conventional cryptocurrency wallet addresses, as a convenience for transferring cryptocurrency.[108]

Blockchain technology can be used to create a permanent, public, transparent ledger system for compiling data on sales, tracking digital use and payments to content creators, such as wireless users[109] or musicians.[110] The Gartner 2019 CIO Survey reported 2% of higher education respondents had launched blockchain projects and another 18% were planning academic projects in the next 24 months.[111] In 2017, IBM partnered with ASCAP and PRS for Music to adopt blockchain technology in music distribution.[112] Imogen Heap's Mycelia service has also been proposed as blockchain-based alternative "that gives artists more control over how their songs and associated data circulate among fans and other musicians."[113][114]

New distribution methods are available for the insurance industry such as peer-to-peer insurance, parametric insurance and microinsurance following the adoption of blockchain.[115][116] The sharing economy and IoT are also set to benefit from blockchains because they involve many collaborating peers.[117] Online voting is another application of the blockchain.[118][119] The use of blockchain in libraries is being studied with a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services.[120]

Other designs include:

Currently, there are at least four types of blockchain networks public blockchains, private blockchains, consortium blockchains and hybrid blockchains.

A public blockchain has absolutely no access restrictions. Anyone with an Internet connection can send transactions to it as well as become a validator (i.e., participate in the execution of a consensus protocol).[124][self-published source?] Usually, such networks offer economic incentives for those who secure them and utilize some type of a Proof of Stake or Proof of Work algorithm.

Some of the largest, most known public blockchains are the bitcoin blockchain and the Ethereum blockchain.

A private blockchain is permissioned.[46] One cannot join it unless invited by the network administrators. Participant and validator access is restricted. To distinguish between open blockchains and other peer-to-peer decentralized database applications that are not open ad-hoc compute clusters, the terminology Distributed Ledger (DLT) is normally used for private blockchains.

A hybrid blockchain has a combination of centralized and decentralized features.[125] The exact workings of the chain can vary based on which portions of centralization decentralization are used.

A sidechain is a designation for a blockchain ledger that runs in parallel to a primary blockchain.[126][127] Entries from the primary blockchain (where said entries typically represent digital assets) can be linked to and from the sidechain; this allows the sidechain to otherwise operate independently of the primary blockchain (e.g., by using an alternate means of record keeping, alternate consensus algorithm, etc.).[128]

With the increasing number of blockchain systems appearing, even only those that support cryptocurrencies, blockchain interoperability is becoming a topic of major importance. The objective is to support transferring assets from one blockchain system to another blockchain system. Wegner[129] stated that "interoperability is the ability of two or more software components to cooperate despite differences in language, interface, and execution platform". The objective of blockchain interoperability is therefore to support such cooperation among blockchain systems, despite those kinds of differences.

There are already several blockchain interoperability solutions available.[130] They can be classified in three categories: cryptocurrency interoperability approaches, blockchain engines, and blockchain connectors.

The IETF has a recent Blockchain-interop working group that already produced the draft of a blockchain interoperability architecture.[131]

Blockchain mining the peer-to-peer computer computations by which transactions are validated and verified requires a significant amount of energy. The Bank for International Settlements criticized the public proof-of-work blockchains for high energy consumption.[132][133][134] In a 2021 study conducted at Cambridge University, researchers determined that Bitcoin (at 121.36 terawatt-hours per year) uses more electricity annually than Argentina (at 121 TWh) and the Netherlands (at 108.8 TWh).[135] According to Digiconomist, one bitcoin transaction requires about 707.6 kilowatt-hours of electrical energy, the amount of energy the average U.S. household consumes in 24 days.[136]

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen called Bitcoin "an extremely inefficient way to conduct transactions", saying "the amount of energy consumed in processing those transactions is staggering."[137] "Bitcoin uses more electricity per transaction than any other method known to mankind", Bill Gates said. "It's not a great climate thing."[138]

Nicholas Weaver, of the International Computer Science Institute at the University of California, Berkeley, examined blockchain's online security, and the energy efficiency of proof-of-work public blockchains, and in both cases found it grossly inadequate.[139][140] The 3145 TWh of electricity used for bitcoin in 2018 produced 1722.9 MtCO2.[141][142]

Inside the cryptocurrency industry, concern about high energy consumption has led some companies to consider moving from the proof of work blockchain model to the less energy-intensive proof of stake model.[143]

In October 2014, the MIT Bitcoin Club, with funding from MIT alumni, provided undergraduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology access to $100 of bitcoin. The adoption rates, as studied by Catalini and Tucker (2016), revealed that when people who typically adopt technologies early are given delayed access, they tend to reject the technology.[144]

Motivations for adopting blockchain technology have been investigated by researchers. Janssen et al. provided a framework for analysis.[145] Koens & Poll pointed out that adoption could be heavily driven by non-technical factors.[146] Based on behavioral models, Li[147] discussed the differences between adoption at individual level and at organization level.

Scholars in business and management have started studying the role of blockchains to support collaboration.[148][149] It has been argued that blockchains can foster both cooperation (i.e., prevention of opportunistic behavior) and coordination (i.e., communication and information sharing). Thanks to reliability, transparency, traceability of records, and information immutability, blockchains facilitate collaboration in a way that differs both from the traditional use of contracts and from relational norms.[150] Contrary to contracts, blockchains do not directly rely on the legal system to enforce agreements.[151] In addition, contrary to the use of relational norms, blockchains do not require trust or direct connections between collaborators.

The need for internal audit to provide effective oversight of organizational efficiency will require a change in the way that information is accessed in new formats.[153] Blockchain adoption requires a framework to identify the risk of exposure associated with transactions using blockchain. The Institute of Internal Auditors has identified the need for internal auditors to address this transformational technology. New methods are required to develop audit plans that identify threats and risks. The Internal Audit Foundation study, Blockchain and Internal Audit, assesses these factors.[154] The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants has outlined new roles for auditors as a result of blockchain.[155]

In September 2015, the first peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to cryptocurrency and blockchain technology research, Ledger, was announced. The inaugural issue was published in December 2016.[156] The journal covers aspects of mathematics, computer science, engineering, law, economics and philosophy that relate to cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin.[157][158]

The journal encourages authors to digitally sign a file hash of submitted papers, which are then timestamped into the bitcoin blockchain. Authors are also asked to include a personal bitcoin address in the first page of their papers for non-repudiation purposes.[159]

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Blockchain - Wikipedia

Blockchain | NIST

Blockchain represents a new paradigm for digital interactions and serves as the underlying technology for most cryptocurrencies.

A blockchain is a collaborative, tamper-resistant ledger that maintains transactional records. The transactional records (data) are grouped into blocks. A block is connectedto the previous one by including a unique identifier that is based on the previous blocks data. As a result, if the data is changed in one block, its unique identifier changes, which can be seen in every subsequent block (providing tamper evidence). This domino effect allows all users within the blockchain to know if a previous blocks data has been tampered with. Since a blockchain network is difficult to alter or destroy, it provides a resilient method of collaborative record keeping.

NIST researchers have been investigating blockchain technologies at multiple levels: from use cases, applications and existing services, to protocols, security guarantees, and cryptographic mechanisms. Research outcomes include scientific papers and the production of software for experimentation as well as providing direction for other NIST endeavors in this space. Blockchain has the potential to be implemented in many different systems, to include manufacturing supply chains, data registries, digital identification, and records management.

Credit: NIST

NISTIR 8202 Blockchain Technology Overview Point of Contact: Dylan YagaSummary: A high-level technical document explaining the technology involved in blockchain systems, as well as how the systems work.

Blockchain for Industrial Applications Community of InterestPoint of Contact:blockchainCOI@nist.govSummary:The BIA COI with members from government, industry, and academia is providingguidelines to create a (better) synergy between end users, research community, and solution providersto reduce complexity, cost, and delay of adoption of blockchain technologies.

Enhanced Distributed Ledger TechnologyPoint of Contact: D. Richard KuhnSummary: The Enhanced Distributed Ledger Technology project examines the traditional blockchain data structure and seeks to create a new data structure (the block matrix) to provide high reliability, and security while also enabling deletion or updating capabilities not currently found in most blockchain systems.

NIST Cybersecurity White Paper - A Taxonomic Approach to Understanding Emerging Blockchain Identity Management SystemsPoints of Contacts:blockchain-idms-paper@nist.govSummary: A high-level technical document breaking down the key components, emerging standards, and system architectures that support blockchain-based identity management systems.

NISTIR 8301 Blockchain Networks: Token Design and Management OverviewPoints of Contacts:blockchain-token-paper@nist.govSummary: An overview of token data models and important building blocks for account, transaction, and infrastructure management in an effort to lower the barriers to study, prototype, and integrate token-related standards and protocols

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Blockchain | NIST

Hook to plate: how blockchain tech could turn the tide for sustainable fishing – The Guardian

In recent weeks, a new $50m (35m) hybrid vessel set sail from Mauritius and headed out into the Southern Ocean where the crew will spend three months longline fishing for the Patagonian toothfish. By the time the fish are brought back, processed and sent to customers, consumers will know where and when that specific fish was caught, which boat landed it, who processed it and which certifications have been met. The technology enabling this is blockchain.

From the day its landed to when it ends up on someones plate, blockchain gives toothfish traceability right from the start, says Steve Paku, captain of the Cape Arkona. People can just scan the barcode and the whole story is right there in front of them.

Blockchain is just one way that fisheries are trying to ensure better traceability from hook to plate but it is garnering a lot of interest. Blockchain cannot be tampered with and the data can be accessed by everyone along the supply chain, from certification schemes to the final consumer. Because it is digital, decentralised and updated in real time, a blockchain tag contains valuable information that a physical label never could. In combination with DNA testing to prove the specific species of fish, blockchain could play a role in reducing fraud in the seafood industry.

This also matters from a conservation perspective. More than a third of fish populations are overfished, according to the UNs Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Guaranteeing where and how a fish has been caught can help ensure that the catch has been made in an area with sustainable fish populations. It can also help tackle the problem of bycatch. In degrading marine ecosystems, bycatch is detrimental to biodiversity and puts additional, unnecessary strain on marine wildlife. Young fish get caught up in nets with too small a mesh, turtles and dolphins can get entangled in gillnets, and seabirds, including endangered albatross, get injured by hooks unless deterrents are put in place.

Paku has fished for 35 years, first for crayfish off the New Zealand coast and, since 1997, for toothfish, sometimes amid 15-metre swells and 50-knot winds (90km/h). Two years ago, the company he works for, Austral Fisheries, introduced blockchain technology, which Paku says has just become part of the process. When we catch the fish, we take the head, tail and fins off, then a digital tag gets attached to the trunk of each fish before it gets frozen onboard. Blockchain backs up the traceability of the fish more substantially I think this will become the norm in the future.

Since the Netflix documentary Seaspiracy, there has been growing concern about whether seafood can ever be certified as truly sustainable. But blockchain advocates argue that it has already been used to highlight fishy findings in a few high-value seafood supply chains. In 2016, UK-based traceability platform Provenance piloted blockchain in yellowfin tuna loins and skipjack tuna supply chains, tracing products back to individual fishers in Indonesia. WWF-New Zealand used blockchain in a tuna longline fishery in Fiji in 2018, while the Sustainable Shrimp Partnership in Ecuador links data from farmed shrimp to a blockchain platform run by the IBM Food Trust.

According to David Carter, chief executive of Perths Austral Fisheries, blockchain is an added layer of accountability that enables continuous monitoring rather than spot-check audits. We want to achieve transparency as cheaply and cost-effectively as possible. MSC certification could be much simpler in the future, says Carter. We could just get to a point where we publish our scoring criteria.

Carter works with OpenSC, a software company based in Sydney, to verify, trace and share data that provides assurance to consumers, and regulators, about where each toothfish has been caught. Where a ship is fishing is arguably the most important claim to verify for line-caught seafood. A rogue captain cant change the fishing locations that have been recorded using blockchain. Nobody can, says Markus Mutz, chief executive of OpenSC, which is co-founded by WWF and startup BCG Digital Ventures.

Were not trying to replace a certification scheme, he adds. We believe we can be a great additive to it. OpenSCs mission isnt to pass judgment about whether a product is sustainable or not they provide the database proof of something happening and then it is up to others to judge. Certification can be quite binary but in reality sustainability isnt clearcut. Everything is on a scale.

Blockchain is a digital ledger that provides a secure way of making and recording transactions, agreements and contracts. However, uniquely, rather than being kept in one place like the more traditional ledger book, the database is shared across a network of computers.

This network can encompass just a handful of users, or hundreds and thousands of people. The ledger becomes a long list of transactions that have taken place since the beginning of the network, getting bigger over time.

A blockchain database consists of blocks and transactions. Blocks contain batches of transactions that are hashed and encoded. Each block contains the hash of the block before it, which links the two and forms the chain. This process validates each block, all the way back to the original, and is integral to the databases security.

Blockchain technology has been around for a number of years its most well-known use so far isBitcoin, the virtual currency. The uses of blockchain are not limited to financial transactions, though, and enthusiasts are looking into other applications for the technology, especially for the types of transactions where there are often disputes or trust issues.

Katherine Purvis

Thank you for your feedback.

MSC [Marine Stewardship Council] certification, the leading label for sustainable fish that involves looking at 28 performance indicators, came under fire last year in a report by French NGO Bloom. It found 83% of MSC-certified catches between 2009 and 2017 involved damaging fishing methods such as deep-sea bottom trawling and dredging. MSC argues that the sustainability of a fishery is not determined by its size or fishing gear alone, and that even big commercial fisheries need to be able to apply for certification in order to improve the management of fish populations on a global scale.

Blockchain has proved to be an exciting way to track digital data in some pilot case studies, such as with the important work of Austral and OpenSC on toothfish, says Natalie Hunter, MSC head of supply chain development. However, certification standards like the MSC are not just about data, but about practices and processes that ensure sustainable harvesting and effective labelling to remove fraud. Technology will support and improve certification, but it will never be able to replace robust, independently audited certification schemes like the MSC.

FAO traceability expert Petter Olsen believes that while the complexities of the seafood supply chain make it suitable for blockchain, it is not scalable or commercially viable across the sector.

Blockchain works for high-value products where the consumer can pay a bit more for that assurance, and I think well see QR codes or barcodes on more special-interest products, Olsen says. But he believes the potential of blockchain has been exaggerated. Its immutable, so any changes will always be tracked but its just a database.

A recent Guardian investigation found that seafood fraud is prevalent on a vast global scale, with 36% of seafood sampled in supermarkets, fishmongers and restaurants mislabelled. But Olsen argues that sometimes, rather than direct fraud, it can be a naming problem. Common fish names such as sardine or anchovy mean different things in different countries, says Olsen. Seafood has the longest supply chain of any food product, with on average seven stages from catch or farming to the consumer, so its convoluted but also geographically complex with people speaking different languages.

Consistent data is the gold, says Libby Woodhatch, executive chair of the Marin Trust, the international programme for marine ingredient certification. There are lots of different blockchain systems being used in the fishing and seafood processing industry but they all need to be interoperable to ensure the same level of information can be provided from start to finish.

WWF has set out to tackle that, launching the Global Dialogue on Seafood Traceability in 2017 dedicated to drafting the first-ever global standards for seafood traceability.

While it will not single-handedly eliminate llegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (IUU) or prevent overfishing, blockchain will deeply modify how fish are traced, according to an FAO report. The authors suggest that the technology could be best used by fisheries that voluntarily want to show their legal compliance to meet consumer demand and improve trade, and that this may develop even in places where legislation is lacking.

Carter, as an early adopter, is hopeful. Fishing is a long-term game. The real value is directly measured by the wellbeing of the resource that we rely upon and how clever we are at harvesting and selling it. Anything we do that damages that is just dumb.

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversity reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

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Hook to plate: how blockchain tech could turn the tide for sustainable fishing - The Guardian

How Multifamily Investment Will Eventually Migrate to the Blockchain – Multi-Housing News

Mark Ventre

Up until recently, I only had a vague concept of what blockchain technology was, and admittedly conflated it with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Now that Ive spent some time digging into this nascent technology, however, Ive become increasingly convinced it is not only here to stay but that blockchainalong with the assets that transact on itwill transform nearly every aspect of commerce as we know it today.

For newbies like me, blockchain is a digital log on which transactions are made, particularly in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. These transactions are recorded on blocks of data that are validated and added onto the previous block, hence the name.

Due to its decentralized record-keeping technology known as a distributed ledger, transactions made on the blockchain are secure, encrypted, and very difficult to manipulate or hack into.

Commercial real estate has been slow to adopt disrupting technologies and new methods of transacting. This leads to the question: Will migrating to the blockchain ever become a reality for an industry averse to change?

The answer is yes eventually.

The blockchain platform will not only be used to transact multifamily and other types of real estate but also to house many other aspects of real estate. Some of the utilities the blockchain will encompass will include, smart contracts, due diligence, transaction history, title documents, permits, property management, leasing and more. It will serve as an immutable digital paper trail.

This will inevitably improve transparency, make transaction processes more efficient, and limit the use of intermediaries, thereby saving time and resources. Sorry, everyone, youll still need brokers, but even we will have to adapt.

This platform will also allow for the tokenization of real estate so that an asset, or a fraction thereof, is converted to a digital token that exists on the blockchain. This could create new opportunities to invest and make an illiquid asset more liquid and reduce the cost of entry.

While this emerging technology may be exciting, it has thus far been largely theoretical for the real estate industry, as there have been very few real-world applications to date. Trusting an unproven system with assets worth millions of dollars is a tough pill to swallowat least for now.

The Federal Reserve and about 80 percent of the worlds central banks are contemplating their own versions of digital currencies. After all, its not like banks are just going to admit defeat and fade into obscurity. On the contrary, once the industry is regulated, the digital dollar will become a reality, and it will also transact on the blockchain along with Bitcoin and other cryptos.

The commercial real estate industry is years away from any pragmatic usage of blockchain technology. Rest assured, though, it will be coming to a town near you.

Mark Ventre is a senior vice president at Stepp Commercial.

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Chinese Officials Embrace Blockchain During Conflux-Hosted Blockchain Summit at Pujiang Innovation Forum – PRNewswire

SHANGHAI, June 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Conflux, the only regulatory-compliant public, permissionless blockchain project in China, hosted a summit on blockchain at the Pujiang Innovation Forum on June 2-3, 2021. The summit, featuring 15+ speakers and guests from several research institutions and government departments, focused on the use of real-world blockchain applications in various sectors, including the construction industry, engineering, and transportation.

Founded in 2008, the Pujiang Innovation Forum is an annual event that features speakers and thought leaders from international organizations, universities, research institutions, and global think tanks. Sponsored by the Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China and the Shanghai Municipal People's Government, the conference centers on innovation and aims to be an influential source of information, thought leadership, and discussion for next-generation technological development.

As part of the 2021 event, Conflux hosted a summit titled "Future Connect - Pujiang Innovation Forum: The Blockchain Development Summit." The summit centered on the role of blockchain in the 14th Five-Year Plan, an outline of China's economic and social development over the next several years. The purpose of Future Connect was to lay a solid consensus foundation for the development of China's blockchain technology, focus on leveraging the country's blockchain ecological resources, and help propel China's role as a leader in the blockchain spacewhich requires improvement of the underlying technology powering blockchains.

Fan Long, the founder of Conflux, delivered the keynote speech on how blockchain is more than the digital assets market and what it will take for the technology to see mainstream adoption.

"The true value of blockchain is trust. Once it is used in the mainstream, it will rebuild production relations and make way for increased productivity," explained Fan during the keynote. "It will take time for blockchain technology to be accepted, and for the public to truly understand blockchain's capabilities. Only when we as a society form a consensus on blockchain technology can we effectively promote the mainstream adoption and application of this emerging technology."

Other speeches, interviews, and roundtable discussions featured professors and representatives from several prominent institutions, including General Secretary Xi Jinping, whose quotes have been translated into English.

"The integrated application of blockchain technology plays an important role in new technological innovation and industrial transformation," said Xi. "We must understand the blockchain as its corean important breakthrough in technological independent innovationclarify the main direction, increase investment, focus on mastering a number of key core technologies, and accelerate the development of blockchain technology and industrial innovation."

Yao Qizhi, an academician at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and chief scientist at the Tree-Graph Blockchain Research Institute, joined the event via video to share his thoughts on the value of blockchain technology.

"I believe that blockchain is not just a technology, and the trust value it creates can penetrate into all aspects of society to benefit the future life of mankind," Yao shared. "I hope that more scientists will join the research and development field of blockchain technology so that China can lead the blockchain industry. I also hope that people from all walks of life will have the courage to try and introduce blockchain technology into various application scenarios so that basic research and practical applications will begin to increase and we can jointly create a prosperous blockchain application ecology."

The forum also focused on blockchain performance breakthroughs, including Conflux's Tree-Graph consensus mechanism, a high-performance algorithm used to facilitate the processing of 3000 to 6000 transactions per second (TPS) without sacrificing decentralization or security. Conflux has passed rigorous tests to confirm the performance of the Tree-Graph consensus algorithm, which is opening the door for further development using blockchain technology and a thriving ecosystem of applications.

Conflux's involvement in the Pujiang Innovation Forum comes on the heels of several new developments, including the mainnet release of ShuttleFlow, one of Conflux's unique technological features that sets it apart from other chains and decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms. ShuttleFlow is the first cross-chain bridge to support the blockchain networks of Binance, Huobi, and OKexthe most widely used digital asset exchanges in Asiain addition to Ethereum.

About Conflux

Conflux is a permissionless Layer 1 public blockchain connecting decentralized economies across borders and protocols. Fast, scalable, and solidity compatible, with zero congestion and low fees, Conflux is transforming how the world transacts and leading the transformation to a sustainable, borderless economy.

As the only regulatory compliant, public, and permissionless blockchain in China, Conflux provides a unique advantage for projects building and expanding into Asia. Conflux aims to connect decentralized economies to strengthen the overall DeFi ecosystem globally.

To learn more about Conflux, visit confluxnetwork.org/.

SOURCE Conflux

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Chinese Officials Embrace Blockchain During Conflux-Hosted Blockchain Summit at Pujiang Innovation Forum - PRNewswire

Brady Dale: Blockchain Games That Gamers Want to Win – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

Blockchain games arent going to capture the public imagination until theres a genuinely great game full stop.

It looks like the industry thinks gamers will one day say, Oh cool, I can own my digital items? Lets play this blockchain game!

Thats not how its going to work. This premise wont fly until gamers say, This blockchain game is so cool! Oh, hey, neat, I guess I really own my digital items?

This article is excerpted fromThe Node, CoinDesk's daily roundup of the most pivotal stories in blockchain and crypto news. You can subscribe to get the fullnewsletter here.

Gamers want to play great games. If they can get additional benefits out of playing, great, but it needs to be a great game first and foremost. Play-to-Earn will always feel more like work-to-earn as long as the game is boring compared to distractions available on platforms such as the PlayStation or Nintendo Switch.

And the existing game companies are not going to blockchainify their famous games. Fortnite is not going to lead here by making skins provably scarce with Ethereum or Solana or Doge. Sorry, no. Centralized control of these commodities works for their business model.

A great game will need to be built from the ground up for blockchain by crypto believers.

As I was working on this post, I went and watched a few videos for the upcoming game Chainmonsters, from Dapper Labs, the company Crunchbase credits with $357 million in investment. The game is still in alpha, it should be noted, and its updating all the time, including recently slicking up its graphics.But the game is basically one where you wander around a world gathering up little monsters, playing them in fights to increase their experience and make more badass monsters. What does that sound like? It sounds like Pokmon.

Apparently this is so true that, at least according to YouTuber nondairi, folks who compare the game to Pokmon actually get kicked out of the games Discord. Which is weird because its not even the first Pokmon knock-off to show up on the blockchains. We covered Etheremon, for example, three years ago.

And look, I get it: A game doesnt have to be amazingly advanced to capture popular imaginations. The bizarrely profitable mobile game, Flappy Bird, came out in a year when Assassins Creed was on its fourth iteration. It is possible for a simple game to take off, but the popularity of Flappy Bird was a wild outlier. The popularity of any entry in the Assassins Creed mythos is not.

And, on that note: right next to one of the videos I watched about Chainmonsters was a video about a forthcoming game for the PlayStation, Horizon: Forbidden West, from Guerrilla Games. This was an absolutely insane gameplay preview where some guy rides a cyborg elephant the size of a building and then later the players character takes an enemy out with this insane spin-kick stab combo followed by an exploding lightning bolt bow-and-arrow finisher.

Its hard to describe, in a good way.

So crypto will need to make something comparably impressive and drop immutable in-game items somewhere in its guts before gamers really get excited about this industry. It takes a lot of money and a lot of talent to put together a game that really captures gamers attention, but a few people in this industry have made a little money, or so Im told.

So far, the blockchain gaming offerings have largely been slightly lower fidelity derivatives of past video game blockbusters, as if entrepreneurs in this space lack conviction that a truly original, crypto native game can be really good.

You can find lots of videos out there about blockchain games where people brag about making money. Its a whole weird thing. What you cant find are videos of people saying: I cant stop playing this thing and heres how you win.

Earning is nice but its not a game-for-gamers until they want to win.

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Brady Dale: Blockchain Games That Gamers Want to Win - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Are Developers Buying into All the Blockchain Hype? – Dice Insights

Do developers believe thatblockchainhas a future? Or is the technology yet another case of overhype, the current obsession over cryptocurrencies aside?

Stack Overflow recentlyposed that question to nearly 700 software developers. Some 38.56 percent said that blockchain was all hype, while 61.44 percent said that it was a game changer. Moreover, only 23.53 percent of developers said theyd worked with blockchain in the past, versus the 76.47 percent who hadnt touched the technology in a professional context.

Among those who havent developed with blockchain, some 61.85 percent of them want to, while 38.15 percent said they had no interest. Another interesting thing to note: Whenever the price of Bitcoin hits a milestone, the number of blockchain-related questions developers ask on Stack Overflow also rises:

That echoes another long-term trend: Interest in blockchain-related jobsroughly fluctuating with the price of Bitcoin. As far back as three years ago, spikes in Bitcoin prices led to a jump in blockchain-related jobs on Dice. According to Burning Glass, the percentage of technology jobs that ask for blockchain skills remains pretty lowbut could increase substantially over the next decade.

Blockchain isnt just cryptocurrency, of course (although the two are tightly linked in the publics mind). Companies large and small are examining the technologys uses in everything fromsmart contractingtocybersecurity. If youre interested in learning more,experts adviseexploring online courses such as Udacity and Coursera, as well as specific sites such asBitcoin.org.

According to Burning Glass, jobs that involve blockchain have a median salary of $97,000, with six-figure compensation easily unlockable with just a few years of experience. In addition, virtually all the jobs that currently ask for blockchain skills request a bachelors degree, which means you dont have to earn ultra-advanced degrees in order to land that job interviewyou just need to demonstrate that you actually have the skills.

Want more great insights?Create a Dice profile today to receive the weekly Dice Advisor newsletter, packed with everything you need to boost your career in tech. Register now

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Blockchain for business: CoinGeek’s Zurich Conference is live & free with over 100 speakers – PRNewswire

LONDON, June 7, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- CoinGeek's 7th Conference (June 8-10) will feature real use cases in BSV blockchain technology ranging from healthcare to eSports, iGaming to NFTs, and will focus on the environmental impact of digital assets and the future of money itself.

In the panel discussion about the future of money you will be able to hear the views of Urs Birchler, Professor of Banking, University of Zurich, Dr Jurg R Conzett, Founding President from Switzerland's Museum of Money, Swiss National Bank Board Member, Thomas Moser, and Dr Craig Wright, the inventor of Bitcoin.

Never afraid of a robust debate, CoinGeek have also invited Bitcoin sceptics Nouriel Roubini and Nassim Nicholas Taleb to discuss Where The Value of Bitcoin Should Come From on Day 3, Thursday June 10.

As blockchain technology becomes increasingly mainstream CoinGeek Zurich has recruited the European Commission's Head of Unit for Digital Innovation, Lichtenstein's Financial Centre Director and Switzerland's State Secretariat for International Finance to talk about blockchain law and regulation.

CoinGeek New York (October 2020) saw over 30,000 online viewers tune in and CoinGeek London (February 2020) managed to accommodate over 1,500 actual human beings at the venue.

CoinGeek Zurich will run for three days (June 8-10) and will be live streamed, free of charge, on the Virtual Platform and will be live on YouTube and all social media streaming.

If that was not enough Haute Horlogerie brand, Franck Muller, is putting out a new limited edition timepiece collection.A tribute to Bitcoin's creator, the watch is named the Nakamoto. At the end of CoinGeek Zurich,one registered virtual attendee will be announced the winner of theseexclusive timepieces.

Ignite the Power of Data and blockchain data technology with CoinGeek Zurich.

For further information, media accreditation or access to speakers for interview please contact: [emailprotected]

CoinGeek Zurich is kindly sponsored by: Bitcoin Association, Boquan, Cozen O'Connor, EHR Data, Fabriik, nChain, Ontier, TAAL and Vaionex.

SOURCE CoinGeek

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Blockchain for business: CoinGeek's Zurich Conference is live & free with over 100 speakers - PRNewswire

Caizcoin Ready to Create its Own Crypto Ecosystem based on Islamic Blockchain Network – PRNewswire

CHAN, Switzerland, June 5, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- This pandemic period has witnessed an incomparable upsurge in the number of crypto coins launching in the market every day. Commercial and central banks across the world are now using blockchain technology for payment processing and issuing of their digital currencies. Blockchain technology enables cross-border payments that are less expensive and faster as compared to traditional systems. Caizcoin is one of those many cryptocurrencies developed in Germany but with a unique working model. It was built with the core principle of bringing the Islamic and western countries together. Caizcoin will soon operate on the world's first Islamic blockchain offering seamless financial services to Muslims and non-muslims.

Caizcoinis not only limited to Muslim investors; anyone can access and benefit from its services. It also provides users with fast and cost-efficient money transfers all across the globe at a minute cost. This token is backed by the metal price, which also makes it receptive to uncertain volatilities. Users can freely trade and transact with it as there is no holding period involved. Users can also use its configurable API for accepting payments.

Caizcoins Team comprises a young, like-minded group of developers who want to aid digital solutions for drawbacks faced by the Islamic finance sector. Caizcoin aims to provide users with faster and more reliable finance services by incorporating new technologies complying with Islamic Finance rules enabling borderless transactions at low costs. In 2020, The global blockchain technology market size was valued at USD 3.67 billion, of which the financial services segment accounted for more than 38.0% share with companies such as Coinbase Global, Inc. (NASDAQ: COIN) leading this list. Caizcoin has also received a "fatwa certificate" from the council of Islamic experts, making it officially compliant with Islamic laws.

Collaborators who want to attain this coin will have to comply with its detailed KYC review, ensuring all its vendors adhere to Islamic principles. It also offers a free threshold limit, where users can benefit from zero free transactions up to a specific limit. Although, the company is yet to disclose the exact amount of limit.

Caizcoin will offer an entire ecosystem enabling seamless financial services.

The CAIZ token will soon be listed on the UniSwap exchange, and users will also be able to earn rewards with its liquidity portal and other platforms. The company will soon launch its blockchain while adhering to "Islamic Principles". Due to these principles, Islamic Banking is experiencing much higher market growth rates in western countries. Islamic principles prohibit speculation and the practice of overloading companies with debt. Hence, they appeal highly to those worried about the financial system's stability or interested in ethical banking practices. The Caizcoin blockchain will be this generation's first Islamic blockchain offering users maximum security. It will add many technological advancements to CAIZ, making it suitable for everyone alike. Built upon a decentralized stalked blockchain, Caizcoin will act as a stepping stone for many upcoming cryptocurrencies to follow Islamic principles.

Social Links:Instagram: https://instagram.com/caizcoin_officialTwitter: https://twitter.com/caizcoin/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Caizcoin-100282385356919/Telegram: https://t.me/caizcoin_official

Media Contact Details:Company Name: CaizcoinCompany website: https://caizcoin.com/

SOURCE Caizcoin

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Caizcoin Ready to Create its Own Crypto Ecosystem based on Islamic Blockchain Network - PRNewswire

Blockchains role in the future of crypto – Yahoo Finance

John Wu, Ava Labs President, joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss growth at the Bitcoin 2021 Conference and Avalanche USDs place in the crypto space.

- Big conference going on down in Miami, Florida. And it is all about crypto Bitcoin 2021 Conference. And Yahoo Finance's Zack Guzman is at the center of it all with a guest. Zack, take it away.

ZACK GUZMAN: Yeah, thanks, Brian. I'm here with John Wu president of Ava Labs. And John, appreciate you taking the time here to chat.

JOHN WU: Zack, thank you for having me.

ZACK GUZMAN: You're probably the most closely dressed individual to me here today. And I'm wearing a blazer. That's because you come from the tech world. You worked at Tiger, you're well known in kind of the financial sphere. That may be different than some of the retail crowd here. But talk to me about how it's changed, this Bitcoin '21 conference relative to the other ones you've been to in the past.

JOHN WU: Right. So I've been going to these tentpole type conferences for four or five years. And the number one thing you see happening is the number of people who are institutional or enterprise, traditional enterprise, related coming into these conferences are growing as a percentage every single year. Four or five years ago, maybe 20% of the population. Today, it's, I would guess, 60%. And there's 13,000. And the last consensus that was in person was about 8,000 I think.

So the crowds are growing. And the people coming out more and more coming over from traditional finance or enterprise.

ZACK GUZMAN: Yeah.

JOHN WU: On top of that, I would say in '17 and '18, when they came to this, they were tourists, or they were trying to get educated. The institutional enterprises who are here now, they're active. They're participating or they're serious about participating. So volumes increase and engagement is increased.

ZACK GUZMAN: Yeah, and we've seen the dollars too coming in from the institutional investors started to increase there as well. And I definitely want to ask you about what you're trying to accomplish there with Ava Labs' Avalanche Protocol which we can get into in a sec. But I mean that's a big part of it. The institutional dollars now creates a bigger opportunity for things like you're building out right now to capitalize on all the money that's flowing in.

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JOHN WU: That's right. I mean, if you just take Coinbase who had an unbelievable IPO, my guess is about a year and a half ago, retail in terms of the assets they custody represented probably like 60%, 70%. Today it's inverted. I would bet the institutional money is probably 70%. And retail is a lot lower, 30%. But the amount has also grown. Incredible.

And that is great because it feeds ultimately more investment into the operating success of all of these companies in the space. And it's no different from I think in the late '90s when the money went into internet. Some of the companies didn't work out. And there was a lot of bust in 2000. But what comes out of it is great customer use. And ultimately you have these great tech companies that made your life, my life, a lot easier.

ZACK GUZMAN: Well, let's talk about why you built the Avalanche Protocol here because it's one of those things where you get a lot of these things popping up as you said, you don't know which one's real or not. But Andreessen Horowitz, one of the institutions backing what you guys are working on here, as well as the enthusiasm that's come from other investors as well. So talk to me about what you're trying to do with Avalanche and what it improves upon when you talk about-- it's high praise to be talking about in Ethereum 2.0 killer. We talk about Ethereum killers. But to be an Ethereum 2.0 killer and what you're trying to do there, what are you trying to solve?

JOHN WU: So we don't consider ourselves Ethereum killers. We complement Ethereum. So the Avalanche Protocol is compatible. It's EVM compatible. So it's the same type of development you can do on the Ethereum blockchain, you can do on the Avalanche blockchain. And also it's not just A16, we also have Polychain, Metastable, Initialized Capital, all great partners of ours helping us help the Avalanche Protocol build an ecosystem on top of it.

What Avalanche ultimately will be is the premier place to digitize or tokenize just about any asset out there. Right now, we've only been out on the main net for about eight months. And we've already made great strides. There's 50 live gaps on the Avalanche ecosystem. The goal is not necessary just to tackle the $100 billion of DeFi right now growing at a very fast pace, but using the Avalanche technology to tokenize the $700 plus trillion of financial assets around the world on financial services balance sheets. That's the ultimate goal. And that's what the promise is for a lot of these first layer protocols, Ethereum included.

ZACK GUZMAN: Yeah, no. Because it seems like one of those things where you roll out something like this where you're trying to stress the efficiencies of you know the blockchain that you built here and what you're trying to solve. And it's interesting to see kind of different projects tackle different problems. And it sounds like you're really zoned in on financial applications here. But I mean, when you talk about some of those projects being built on top of Avalanche, which ones do you see as maybe the most promising one you'd want to dig into? Or is it more to be built as a general purpose tool?

Because I feel like no one ever wants to pigeonhole themselves, but it's kind of important if you want to catch on and be known as the blockchain for this.

JOHN WU: Well I think that this next version of the ecosystem for blockchains is not going to be like the previous one where Ethereum was the only place and only game in town. It'll be more like the analog for the social networks where you have a winner take most like Facebook, but then you're going to have TikTok, you're going to have Clubhouse, and you're going to have Snapchat, and you're going to have all of these others that are more dedicated and focused on something and certain features.

So with Avalanche, we solved the trilemma. There's security, there's also scale, the low gas prices, and very importantly to the purists, it's decentralized. Self governance and giving the individual empowerment is very important theme these days. So that is one component of Avalanche. We also have the ability because of the enterprise component with our private blockchain to provide services as literally like a SAS product for financial services companies in the traditional world as well.

ZACK GUZMAN: There's a lot of opportunities to go here. And it's the early days as you said. Only eight months on the main net here.

JOHN WU: Only eight months in the main net. I would say organically one of the fastest growers in eight months.

ZACK GUZMAN: Yeah. Well, I mean it's fascinating to watch. And clearly a lot more to talk about. But happy we could have connected here. We'll have you back on to discuss kind of the growth there. But John Wu, appreciate you taking the time. President of Ava Labs.

JOHN WU: Zack, thank you.

ZACK GUZMAN: All right. We'll send it back to you guys in the studio.

- All right. Thanks so much, Zack. And Zack will be reporting more throughout the day and also through the weekend from that conference.

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