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Daily Archives: July 9, 2017
Cruz points to ‘steady progress’ on healthcare bill – The Hill
Posted: July 9, 2017 at 12:04 pm
Sen. Ted CruzTed CruzCruz points to 'steady progress' on healthcare bill Sunday shows preview: Trump returns as healthcare push looms McConnell assures White House hes not changing strategy on ObamaCare repeal: report MORE (R-Texas) said Sunday there has been "steady progress" made on the Senate GOP's healthcare bill.
During an interview on ABC's "This Week," Cruz blasted ObamaCare and said he believes Senate Republicans can come together to accomplish their promises to repeal ObamaCare.
"I think we are making steady progress," Cruz said.
"The conversations have been collaborative and in good faith."
"If we can't get this done right now, I agree with the president, then let's honor the promise on repeal and spend more time to get it done," Cruz said.
"I believe we can get it done," he added.
Senate GOP leaders are locked in battle with Democrats and some members of their own party to pass their healthcare bill.
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These Scientists Have Managed to Stop the Progress of Alzheimer’s in Animals – Good News Network
Posted: at 12:04 pm
Home Health These Scientists Have Managed to Stop the Progress of Alzheimers in Animals
This treatment is making headlines in South America for its groundbreaking ability to halt the development of Alzheimers in animals.
Brazilian researchers discovered the importance of a protein that reestablishes the electrical circuits in the brain, thus stopping the effects of the disease.
RELATED VIDEO:See The Moment This Man Learned His Missing Wife with Alzheimers Was Found
It is estimated that the illness affects over 35 million people worldwide today. Additionally, it is the main cause of dementia in senior citizens.
The researchers of the Science Institute of the UFRJ focused the study on the TGF beta 1, a substance that is naturally produced by the brain. They discovered that when elderly brains suffered a reduction of TGF beta 1, the neurons stopped communicating with each other.
In laboratory studies, the researchers already reduced most of the symptoms of Alzheimers. The animals were able to recover recent memories, which are the most damaged during the initial stages of the disease. Though the research team leader says this is an important milestone, he warns that the knowledge does not yet translate into a cure.
What we did was just a step towards the treatment now we have to study the consequences in middle and long terms, says researcher Flavia Gomes in Espanol. But our work is surely contributing towards the final cure.
Click To Share The News With Your Friends OR, Republish Reprint (Photo byJose Luis Olivares)
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Officials point to slow progress in Smart City’s first year – The Columbus Dispatch
Posted: at 12:04 pm
Rick Rouan The Columbus Dispatch @RickRouan
Columbus took its biggest step onto the national stage a year ago when it was dubbed Americas Smart City.
The distinction came with a big prize. The city received a $40 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation and another $10 million from Vulcan Inc. to turn Columbus into the test track for intelligent transportation systems.
It also came with a ticking clock: four years to follow through on a wide-ranging proposal and produce data showing what pieces succeeded or failed.
A year later, autonomous vehicles, universal fare cards and hundreds of electric vehicle charging stations havent yet materialized. But officials say the city has made progress, even if you cant see it on the streets.
I think a lot has been accomplished in the last year, but its been more of the internal workings, said Michael Stevens, Columbus chief innovation officer.
The internal workings didnt exist in Columbus before it won the grant.
The city signed grant agreements with the federal government in August and with Vulcan in April. It spun off Smart Columbus from the Department of Public Service and paired up with the Columbus Partnership, a collection of the citys private-sector executives, to run the program at the Idea Foundry in Franklinton.
Those two groups split responsibilities, though they work together. The citys primary job is to make sure it fulfills the promises made for the $40 million federal grant. The Partnership is handling a lot of the plans around promoting electric vehicles as required by the $10 million grant from Vulcan.
They've also spent time rounding up other commitments and partnerships that total more than $500 million. About $23 million of that is cash.
It includes about $262 million in related projects, such as American Electric Powers plan to install smart meters in homes, and $218 million in research commitments. Some of those projects already were in the works but dovetail with Smart Cities.
The goal is to sustain the initiative beyond the four-year grant period.
Its the first 10 feet of a 10-mile race, said Mark Patton, the Partnerships vice president overseeing Smart Columbus. Its going to play out over years.
Some of the related projects are likely to be among the first to hit the streets. For example, the Central Ohio Transit Authority plans to update its fare boxes in the fall to accept payment with a cellphone or smart card that can be loaded with money on the internet.
COTA already was planning that $6.5 million project, but it aligned with the Smart Columbus plan to produce a fare card that works across multiple forms of transportation, including buses, bike shares and others, CEO Curtis Stitt said.
More electric vehicle charging stations likely will start popping up soon, too. The seven-county central Ohio region has 118 stations now, but Smart Columbus plans to add 305 by the end of the grant.
Patton said he already is working with members of the Columbus Partnership to convert their fleet vehicles to electric and to create incentives for employees to buy electric cars. They could provide better parking and charging stations to encourage workers to buy electric, he said.
The demonstration projects the city promised in its grant application are moving slower. During 2017 and 2018, the city will turn ideas such as autonomous shuttles at Easton, universal fare cards and a clearinghouse for transportation data into projects it could eventually produce.
The so-called integrated data exchange has never been produced before, Stevens said, and Smart Columbus has to figure out how to build it.
Smart Columbus should start purchasing equipment needed for the projects in 2018. They will do internal testing and start projects in 2019 and 2020, he said.
Stevens acknowledged that some of the projects are going to fail, and Smart Columbus has to provide the data and process to the government so it can either replicate them elsewhere or avoid the same mistakes. Parts of the plan have been evolving even as the city works with the U.S. Department of Transportation because of rapid changes in technology, he said.
You dont want to use Betamax when everyone else is using VHS, he said.
@RickRouan
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Road work makes it harder to get to Bristol Progress Days – Kenosha News
Posted: at 12:04 pm
BRISTOL Construction is making it more difficult to get to the Bristol Progress Days festivities that continue today and conclude this evening.
Organizers say alternate routes should be used due to construction on Highway 45.
From Highway 50 (75th Street) motorists should go south on 184th Avenue (Highway D), west on 83rd Street and south on 198th Avenue to the festival grounds, at Hansen Park, 8600 200th Avenue (Highway 45).
The carnival on the Progress Days grounds will be open through this evenings events.
The complete listing of activities for today includes:
12:30 p.m. Parade, carnival, volleyball and softball to follow.
2 p.m. Blue Hotel, in the beer tent.
2:30 p.m. Auction.
5 to 7 p.m. Big Balloon Tycoon.
6 p.m. Trip, in the beer tent.
8:30 p.m. Raffle drawing.
Dusk Fireworks
For more information, visit http://www.bristolprogressdays.com.
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NATO membership is Ukraine’s main foreign policy priority – RT
Posted: at 11:55 am
Ukraine has officially set NATO membership as a key foreign policy goal, overturning the countrys non-aligned status adopted by the previous government ousted in the Euromaidan coup of 2014.
An amendment to Ukraines main law related to security was signed by President Petro Poroshenko on Thursday and officially came into force on Sunday.
The amendment, which was published in the Ukrainian Radas official Golos Ukrainy (Voice of Ukraine) newspaper, makes entry into the Euro-Atlantic security realm with the goal of becoming member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization a top priority.
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Poroshenko, who has led the country since the Euromaidan coup removed President Viktor Yanukovich from power in 2014, wrote on his Facebook page that Ukraines course towards NATO membership is now clearly stated as one of the key priorities for government policy. He added that an active effort to reform the security and defense sectors to comply with membership criteria now lies ahead.
The amendment was backed by 276 of the 450 lawmakers in the Verkhovna Rada on June 8. The authors of the draft asserted that NATO membership will help Ukraine strengthen national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity and stop Russian aggression, as cited by Ukrinform media outlet.
Before 2014, Ukraine had been committed to a non-aligned status, meaning the country abstained from entering military alliances and strengthened ties with both Russia and the West. However, things changed dramatically after the coup, and the new government took a pro-Western course with overwhelming support from the Obama administration.
Kiev later unleashed a massive military operation against rebel forces in eastern Ukraine who rejected the coup in the capital. The intense hostilities have claimed the lives of at least 10,000 people, including civilians. Ukraine and its Western backers have accused Russia of supporting the rebels and violating Ukraines sovereignty.
READ MORE:Russia-NATO relations at worst point since Cold War Moscow
Though Moscow has repeatedly dismissed the accusations as baseless, the US has imposed a wave of sanctions against Russia and sent instructors, as well as military aid, to Ukrainian troops fighting in the eastern part of the country. The UK and Canada followed suit shortly afterwards and sent non-lethal supplies to Kievs forces.
Kiev has taken numerous steps to engage in accession talks with NATO over the past few years, but the alliance has been wary of discussing the issue, even when relations between Russia and the West were at historic lows. NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in March that it was up to Ukraine to pursue its NATO aspirations, but warned that its application would be considered carefully once submitted.
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Thats for Ukraine to decide whether they want to apply, Stoltenberg told CNN in April. And then if Ukraine applies, then its for 28 NATO allies to decide whether Ukraine qualifies, he added.
As a rule, adopting new members requires unanimous support from all the members. An applying country must reform its military to comply with NATO standards, ensure the rule of law, and defeat corruption. Some independent analyses have suggested the latter may be difficult for Ukraine.
A recent report from the European Court of Auditors (ECA) featured a discouraging description of Ukraine, both before and after the so-called Maidan events.
Ukraines state finances have deteriorated over the years, mainly due to mismanagement of public funds, it said, adding, despite reform efforts, Ukraine is still perceived as the most corrupt country in Europe Oligarchic clans continue to exert a dominant influence on Ukraines economy, politics and media.
European assessments aside, the Trump administration has also signaled a rethinking of previous US policies supporting Ukraine.
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Whistleblower: The NSA Is Still Collecting the Full Content Of US Domestic E-Mail, Without a Warrant – Center for Research on Globalization
Posted: at 11:55 am
The man whodesignedthe NSAs electronic intelligence gathering system (Bill Binney) sent usan affidavitwhich he signed on the Fourth of July explaining that the NSA is still spying on normal, every day Americans and not focused on stopping terror attacks (Ive added links to provide some background):
The attacks on September 11, 2001 completely changed how the NSA conducted surveillance . the individual liberties preserved in the U.S. Constitution were no longer a consideration. In October 2001, the NSA began to implement a group of intelligence activities now known as the Presidents Surveillance Program.
The Presidents Surveillance Programinvolved the collection of the full content of domestic e-mail trafficwithout any of the privacy protections built into [theprogram that Binney had designed]. This was done under the authorization ofExecutive Order 12333. This meant that the nations e-mail could be read by NSA staff members without the approval of any court or judge.
***
The NSA isstill collecting thefull contentof U.S.domestice-mail, without a warrant. We know this because of the highly-detailed information contained in the documents leaked by former NSA-contractor, Edward Snowden. I have personally reviewed many of these documents.
I can authenticate these documents because they relate to programs that I created and supervised during my years at the NSA.
[U.S. government officials] have also admitted the authenticity of these documents.
***
The documents provided by Mr. Snowden are the type of data that experts in the intelligence community would typically and reasonably rely upon to form an opinion as to the conduct of the intelligence community.
[The Snowden documents prove that the NSA isstill spyingonmost Americans.]
When Mr. Snowden said that he could read the e-mail of a federal judge if he had that judges email address, he was not exaggerating.
***
The NSA is creating a program that shows the real-time location of all cell phones, tablets and computers in the world, at any time. To have a state-actor engaging in this sort of behavior, without any court supervision, is troubling.
***
In their public statements, [government officials] claim that collection of information is limited, and is being done pursuant to Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). FBI Director James Comey recently described Section 702 of FISA as the crown jewel of the intelligence community.
Defendants, however, are not being candid with the Court. Collection is actually being done pursuant to Executive Order 12333(2)(3)(c), which to my knowledge has never been subject to judicial review. This order allows the intelligence community to collectincidentallyobtained information thatmay indicateinvolvement in activities thatmay violatefederal, state, local or foreign laws. Any lawyer can appreciate the scope of this broad language. [Background.]
***
According to media reports, President Obamas former National Security Advisor, Susan Rice, requested email and phone records on President Trump and various members of his political campaignduring and after the 2016 election.
According to these reports, the National Security Council (NSC) has computer logs showing when Rice requested and viewed such records. The requests were made from July 2016 through January 2017, and included President Trump and various members of his campaign staff According to an internal NSC report, the accessed information contained valuable political information on the Trump transition. Rices requests into Trump-related conversations increased following the presidential election last November. None of the requests were reviewed by any independent court.
***
We also know that certain NSA staffers have used their access to e-mail and phone calls to conduct surveillance on current and former significant others. The NSA has referred to this sort of action as LOVEINT, a phrase taken from other internal-NSA terms of art, such as SIGINT for signals intelligence.
***
Bulk collection makes it impossible for the NSA to actually do its job.
For example, consider the Pinwale program, discussed above, in which the NSA searches the collected data based on certain pre-defined keywords, known as the dictionary. The results from the dictionary search are known as the daily pull.
Eighty percent of the NSAs resources go towards review of the daily pull. The problem is that the daily pull is enormous. It is simply not possible for one analyst to review all questionable communications made by millions of people generating e-mail, text messages, web search queries, and visits to websites. Every person making a joke about a gun, bomb or a terrorist incident theoretically gets reviewed by a live person. This is not possible. When I was at the NSA, each analyst was theoretically required to review 40,000 to 50,000 questionable records each day. The analyst gets overwhelmed, and the actual known targets from the metadata analysis get ignored.
This is clear from some of the internal NSA memos released by Edward Snowden and published by the Intercept. In these memos, NSA analysts say:
NSA is gathering too much data. . . . Its making it impossible to focus.
Analysis Paralysis.
Data Is Not Intelligence. Overcome by Overload.
Bulk collection is making it difficult for the NSA to find the real threats. [Indeed.] The net effect from the current approach is that people die first. The NSA has missed repeated terrorist incidents over the last few years, despite its mass monitoring efforts. The NSAcannot identifyfuture terrorism because 99.9999% of what it collects and analyzes isforeseeably irrelevant.This is swamping the intelligence community, while creating the moral hazards and risks to the republic .
After a terrorist incident occurs, only then do analysts and law enforcement go into their vast data, and focus on the perpetrators of the crime.This is exactly the reverse of what they should be doing.If the NSA wants to predict intentions and capabilitiespriorto the crime, then it must focus onknownsubversive relationships, giving decision-makers time to react and influence events.
There is a second reason why data mining bulk collected data is a waste of time and resources: the professional terrorists know that we are looking at their e-mail and telephonic communications. As a result, they use code words that arenotin the dictionary, and will not come up in the daily pull.
***
Thus, collecting mass amounts of data and searching it to find the proverbial needle in a haystack doesnt work. It is fishing in the empty ocean, where the fish are scientifically and foreseeably not present.
Binney explains what we should do instead:
The truth is that there has always been a safe, alternate path to take.Thats a focused, professional, disciplined selection of data off the fiber lines.
***
I serve as a consultant to many foreign governments on the issues described in this affidavit. As such, I have testified before the German Parliament, the British House of Lords, and the EU Libe Committee on Civil Liberties on these issues. I also consult regularly with members of the European Union on intelligence issues.
***
it is my understanding that the European Union intends to adopt legislation requiring its intelligence community to get out of the business of bulk collection, and implement smart selection.
***
Smart selection is not enough. Governments, courts and the public need to have an absolute means of verifying what intelligence agencies are doing. This should be done within government by having a cleared technical team responsible to the whole of government and the courts with the authority and clearances to go into any intelligence agency and look directly into databases and tools in use. This would insure that government as a whole could get to the bottom line truth of what the intelligence agencies were really doing
I would also suggest that agencies be required to implement software that audits their analytic processes to insure compliance with law and to automatically detect and report any violations to the courts and others.
Indeed, Binney has patiently explained for many years thatwe know howto help prevent terrorism andcorruption is whatspreventing us from doing it.
Binney thinks we shouldget seriousabout motivating the intelligence agencies to do their job.
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Whistleblower: The NSA Is Still Collecting the Full Content Of US Domestic E-Mail, Without a Warrant - Center for Research on Globalization
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Waymo Scales Back Claims Against Uber in Driverless Car Dispute – New York Times
Posted: at 11:55 am
Waymos dropping of three patent claims against Uber weakens its original argument for bringing the suit. Still, each side called the latest legal move a victory.
Waymo said it agreed to scale back its patent claims because Uber had halted work on a lidar design that violated Waymos patents and is proceeding with a different design. Waymo is permitted to reassert its claims if Uber returns to the design that Waymo challenged. The company said Ubers current lidar design still violates one of its original patents.
We continue to pursue a patent claim against Ubers current generation device and our trade secret claims, which are not at all affected by this stipulated dismissal, Waymo said in a statement. We look forward to trial.
In a statement, Uber said the dropping of the three claims was yet another sign of Waymo overreaching and not delivering on its claims.
Last month, Waymo received a signal from federal court that the patent claims were not its strongest legal argument in the case. Judge William Alsup of Federal District Court in San Francisco, who is overseeing the case, urged the companys lawyers at a hearing on June 7 to drop the patent claims because youre going to lose on all these patent claims unless you pull some rabbit out of a hat.
Lately, Uber has been trying to distance itself from the actions of Mr. Levandowski, the former head of Googles driverless car project who joined Uber last year.
Waymo has said that Mr. Levandowski worked with Uber to steal proprietary information from Google before joining Uber. Waymo said Uber was aware that Mr. Levandowski had stolen files from Waymo.
Uber said it expressly told Mr. Levandowski to not bring any stolen documents to the company or apply any of Waymos intellectual property to Ubers autonomous vehicle efforts. The company said Waymos lawyers have not found the stolen documents in Ubers possession, despite extensive discovery.
The matter has been complicated by Mr. Levandowskis assertion of his Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination. Uber said it had urged him to cooperate with Waymos lawyers and fired him when he continued to refuse.
In a separate filing on Friday, Uber said Mr. Levandowski, before invoking his Fifth Amendment right, told Travis Kalanick, then Ubers chief executive, that he had downloaded the documents from Google because he was worried that he might not receive full payment of a $120 million bonus owed to him. Uber said this indicated that his actions were unrelated to his work at Uber.
A Waymo spokesman called Ubers claim fictitious and an attempt to distract from evidence showing that Mr. Levandowski met with Uber executives within 24 hours of downloading proprietary Google information.
A version of this article appears in print on July 8, 2017, on Page B5 of the New York edition with the headline: Waymo Drops 3 Claims in Suit Against Uber on Driverless Cars.
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Going strong after 225 years: Our love-hate relationship with the First Amendment – hays Post
Posted: at 11:54 am
Lata Nott
Common practice for liberals and conservatives now is to take turns calling each other enemies of the First Amendment. The results of this years State of the First Amendment survey gave us the opportunity to consider these insults and after the numbers are crunched, who is the real enemy of the First Amendment?
Well, no one. And, everyone.
Most of our fellow citizens, regardless of their political ideology, are quite fond of the First Amendment, at least in the abstract. The people who think that the First Amendment goes too far are a minority 22.5 percent of us. A majority of Americans (67.7 percent) thinks that the press plays an important role as a watchdog on government; a slightly narrower majority (58.8 percent) thinks that freedom of religion should extend to all religious groups, even those widely considered extreme or fringe.
Thats the good news: Even in a time of great political turmoil, were generally supportive of the First Amendments protections.
The bad news: When it comes down to specific applications of the First Amendment, were less positive, and also deeply divided along ideological lines. Both liberals and conservatives have certain pain points where they balk at the amount of protection that the First Amendment provides.
Liberals are more likely than conservatives to think: Colleges should be able to ban speakers with controversial views. People should not be able to express racist comments on social media. Meanwhile, conservatives are more likely than liberals to think: Government officials who leak information to the press should be prosecuted. Journalists should not be able to publish information obtained illegally, even if it serves the public interest. Government should be able to determine which media outlets can attend briefings. Government should be able to hold Muslims to a higher standard of scrutiny. Worth noting: Some of these differences in attitude may not be a direct result of whether youre a liberal or a conservative; instead, they might be circumstantial. Do more liberals support press freedoms because thats a core value of liberal ideology or because the press is a watchdog on the government, which liberals dont currently control?
Do more conservatives think that colleges shouldnt be able to ban speakers because of a greater commitment to free speech or because most banned speakers, at least in recent years, have tended to be conservative? It will be interesting to see in subsequent years if attitudes change as circumstances change.
One thing that unites the majority of Americans right now: Most of us, liberals and conservatives, prefer to read or listen to news that aligns with our own views.
Thats true even if you think that the news media reports with a bias, as most Americans do (56.8 percent). Apparently, were not inclined to correct that bias by taking in multiple and varied news sources. Instead, were more likely to double down on the news that fits in with our pre-existing ideological perspectives.
This finding is both obvious and disheartening: Everyone likes reading and hearing news that confirms what they already believed. Thats one of the factors that keep us so divided.
Lata Nott is executive director of the First Amendment Center of the Newseum Institute. Contact her via email at lnott@newseum.org, or follow her on Twitter at @LataNott.
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Going strong after 225 years: Our love-hate relationship with the First Amendment - hays Post
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Ripple’s XRP: Giving the Third-Largest Cryptocurrency a Second Look – CoinDesk
Posted: at 11:52 am
'P4man' is an active bitcoin miner and investor with an academic background in economy and IT. He has been a member of the online discussion forum Bitcoin Talk since September, 2011.
In this opinion piece, P4man looks at the cryptocurrency market to see if there is a credible investment alternative to bitcoin, focusing this time on XRP, the native token for blockchain startup Ripple's consensus protocol.
I have to admit, I've dreaded writing this part of my series.
Among investors, Ripple is one the most divisive cryptocurrencies around it's either loved or despised, both with equal passion. Even more than ethereum, I believe, it's misunderstood because it's so different from bitcoin.
But, being number threein market cap (actually number two, but more on that later), I can't really avoid writing about it.
Ripple dates back to 2012.I remember when it was launched, as I was one of the beneficiaries of what I believe was their first public giveaway on Bitcoin Talk forums.
If memory serves, I received something like 30,000 XRP tokens (although, I probably cheated using multiple accounts...). Once I received the tokens, I tried out the protocol and tried to understand what it was about. I was equally intrigued and confused by the concept, which was new to me: a peer-to-peer payment network where anyone could issue debt and that was, in essence, currency agnostic.
If I had trouble understanding what that even meant, I understood even less how the XRP token fitted in. What was it for? The only explanation that I remember being given at that time, was that it was meant to prevent network spam. A token of which 100 billion exist that serves to "prevent spam" didn't sound particularly exciting or valuable to me. So, I quickly swapped my free anti-spam tokens for more bitcoin.
It wasn't until much later, when I read Peter Todd's now infamous analysison Ripple's predecessor, Ripplepay, that I began to understand not only what Ripple is, but also what I had only sensed intuitively about the XRP token.
To explain, we need to go back in time.
Before Ripple, and in fact, before even bitcoin launched, Ripplepay was a peer-to-peer payment network created by Ryan Fugger around 2004. This old website, which for some reason still exists, explains it in very simple terms.
In a nutshell, Ripplepay allowed users to issue and swap credit between network participants that trusted each other. Think of it as an online equivalent of someone writing on a Post-it note "good for $50," then signing it. If you trusted whoever signed that note, then that note would be worth $50.
It's simply an IOU, a concept that forms the basis of how banks operate and create fiat money.
In the real world, it's much easier to create and swap IOUs, or "Post-it notes" between trusting individuals, than it is to design a method for cash payments. With cash payments, you don't rely on trusting each other, you exchange something of value. Instead of accepting a counterparty risk, the parties need to trust the value of the object they exchange. So, you need some kind of store of value that can't be easily counterfeited. Something like gold or bank notes (although technically, the latter is also a IOU, only one that is issued by a bank).
It's very similar when you try to digitize it: Ripplepay, as payment system, was a much simpler problem to solve electronically than a digital cash system like bitcoin. First of all, in a payment system, you do not need to worry about double spends; if I issue an IOU to Alice, I can still issue the same amount to Bob, and there is no risk this is somehow the same debt: if I issue it twice, I will just owe both. However, if you allow a (digital) cash asset to be spent twice, this is essentially counterfeiting.
In a payment network, there is also no need for a global consensus: Bob doesn't need to know, or agree with me about how much money I owe to Alice. As long as Bob and I, and Alice and I, agree among each other how much we owe each other, then a local consensus is established, and that's all thats needed.
What you do need in a payment network however, is trust among users.
You can't issue debt to someone who does not trust you. So, you need to set a trust line, or credit limit, that defines to what extend you trust which participant. Trust lines can "ripple" through a network, allowing trading of IOUs with participants you may not know, but with whom you share trusted intermediaries. If Bob and Alice both trust me, Bob could pay Alice with an IOU that I issued to Bob.
Besides requiring trust, in a payment system, you are always exposed to counterparty risks. You might have trusted me when I wrote that good for $50 note, but what if I don't or can't pay back?
Being able to pay electronically without trust, and without counterparty risk, only became possible several years later when Satoshi Nakamoto introduced the world to his solution to this old problem in the form of bitcoin. By using proof-of-work, he created the first real solution for a digital cash system that could store and exchange value, was extremely resilient to counterfeiting, involved no trust and had no counterparty risk.
So, a trust-based IOU payment network like Ripplepay, and a trustless digital cash network like bitcoin, are two completely different things, and yet they are actually quite complementary. Ripplepay, for instance, could easily allow the creation and management of bitcoin-based IOUs among trusting users.
The electronic equivalent of a "good for 1 BTC" Post-it note. Issuing debt is impossible in bitcoin itself, though certainly useful.
A few years after bitcoin was launched, OpenCoin, later Ripple Labs, took over Ripplepay. They completely reworked the protocol. The concept still revolved around managing IOUs, but inspired by bitcoin, they also included a new token called XRP.
The inclusion of a cash token, that is not an IOU, automatically means you now need a protection against double spends and thus a global consensus protocol, because now everyone on the network needs to agree about token transactions and ownership.
What had been a relatively simple concept now became a very complex onethat faced the exact same problems that bitcoin had only just managed to overcome.
And there is no free lunch; bitcoin, revolutionary as its concept may have been, had to make significant sacrifices to achieve a global distributed consensus, such as electricity-consuming proof-of-work (mining), high-latency transactions (multiple transaction confirmations) and limited scalability (monolithic blockchain containing every transaction, ever).
These were problems that a distributed payment network shouldn't have.
Ripple tried to overcome these challenges in a different way than bitcoin. Instead of using proof-of-work, it relied on a new, unproven consensus protocol. This protocol requires users to extend trust to validating servers that produce this consensus. Relying on trust, rather than proof-of-work, kind of makes sense for Ripple, because you need similar trust relationships anyway for IOUs to work.
But this means that an XRP token is absolutely nothing like bitcoin. Instead of needing to trust only the mathematics of proof-of-work, you can only trust the XRP token by setting up trust lines that almost inevitably end at Ripple. And while in theory anyone can set up such a server, if Ripple does not include your server in their trust lines, then you're not part of the consensus-making process.
So, Ripple is highly centralized and XRP is more akin to a PayPal account than a trustless system like bitcoin.
As Peter Todd pointed out in his study, the new requirement of a global consensus protocol which arose solely from the decision to add the XRP token also has serious implications on scalability and security. If the token results in a more complicated, more centralized, less secure and less scalable protocol, you have to ask, why the token was added in the first place? What was wrong with the original concept, which is often compared to an electronic Hawala system, which needed no monolithic global consensus or ledger, and thus could have scaled almost arbitrarily?
The original argument, that the token is needed to counter network spam is not a good one; spam can be prevented by other means, including charging transaction fees that can be paid in any currency on the network, instead of just in XRP. The other argument I hear nowadays, is that XRP would be used as a sort of reserve currency by banks or liquidity providers on the network.
This seems pretty far-fetched to me; why would liquidity providers not use any other common (reserve) currency like US dollars for that, especially considering the highly volatile price of XRP ?
That you don't need a private token on a payment network is perhaps best illustrated by Hyperledger. This is a family of open-source protocols hosted by the Linux foundation, backed by a large consortium of 80 companies that includes IBM, Intel, JPMorgan and Accenture. Hyperledger Fabric in many ways resembles Ripple, but has no preferred, native token, and thus doesn't need a single global consensus. Instead, it supports many concurrent consensus protocols, that can be localized or centralized, depending on what is needed.
In short, it's hard to come up with any rational reason why XRP exists in the Ripple protocol, other than as a means for Ripple to make money. Lots of money. When Ripple launched, Ripple created 100 billion XRP tokens. To achieve some resemblance of fair initial distribution, they donated billions of XRP in various giveaway schemes.
But the company, its founders and associated foundations, still own well over 60 billion of the 100 billion tokens. That should give any investor pause.
For some reason, the existence of these tokens is also ignored by online data source Coinmarketcap, which significantly distorts the actual value of the token supply (basing market cap on "circulating supply").
These tokens are supposed to be fungible, so even if parts of them are temporarily locked up by promises or via "smart contracts" (which ironically, Ripple can't really do), I see no reason to pretend only 38 billion tokens exist.
That's like ignoring the estimated 1 million bitcoin in [bitcoin creator] Satoshi Nakamoto's wallet just because they are not circulating at the moment, and may never circulate. The only correct market cap for Ripple is based on 100 billion tokens, and that currently puts it at the number two spot, above ethereum. A few weeks ago, even temporarily above bitcoin, peaking above $45bn.
Is such valuation reasonable for a token that serves no obvious purpose, and even seems to undermine the usefulness of the underlying protocol?
Ripple investors will point to Ripple's strategic partnerships with significant financial institutions and some ongoing experimental implementations. They will point to the 160 employees, possibly making them the largest blockchain company. They will point out the astronomical figures involved in intra-bank settlements, the market Ripple is aiming for, by presenting its protocol as an alternative to systems like Swift.
Some of these points are absolutely reasonable. Ripple has highly qualified engineers working for it, that undoubtedly produce some useful code that can solve real-world problems. It also has more than credible financial backing and partners in the sector.
There have been a few proof-of-concept implementations and recently Thailand's Siam Commercial Bank announced they starting using Ripple software for Thailand-to-Japan remittance.
This is a big deal, but it needs context; first of all, SCB bank is an investor in Ripple company, making it fairly logical they would experiment and promote the blockchain technology they invested in. More importantly however, I see no mention of XRP in any of the press releases.
Is it being used? Or are they using Interledger Protocol (ILP)? ILP was also developed by Ripple, and appears to be a fairly impressive piece of technology to bridge between various blockchains and systems. It's open source, hosted by the Linux Foundation and could become a part of the Hyperledger framework.
But note that ILP itself has no native token; it doesn't depend on XRP and doesn't add value to it. Even if ILP finds wide adoption in the fintech industry, it will do precious little for XRP.
As for the moonshot of replacing Swift; first of all, I highly doubt a global consensus protocol is the right approach and could even scale to that level. But also, banks currently control Swift. How likely is it they would relinquish control to a small startup and allow themselves to become beholden to its private currency, that they have no need for? I just don't see that happening.
This is especially true when alternatives like Hyperledger exist that do not suffer from Ripple's inherent drawbacks; a protocol which is backed by a far larger consortium of corporations, which relies on proven consensus algorithms that have been researched, peer reviewed and thoroughly tested for over 15 years, and a protocol which at least at first glance, appears to do almost everything Ripple does and more, including things like smart contracts.
The only obvious thing that appears missing from Hyperledger compared to Ripple, is the one thing for which I see absolutely no reason for them to want: the XRP token.
Disclosure:CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, whichhas an ownership stake in Ripple.
Disclaimer: This article should not be taken as, and is not intended to provide, investment advice. Please conduct your own thorough research before investing in any cryptocurrency.
Ripple image via Ripple/YouTube
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Ripple's XRP: Giving the Third-Largest Cryptocurrency a Second Look - CoinDesk
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Cryptocurrency Electricity Requirements Surpasses Annual Energy Consumption of Few Nations – newsBTC
Posted: at 11:52 am
The increasing energy consumption by cryptocurrency mining operations has surpassed the energy requirements of many smaller nations. Read more...
While some continue to praise Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies as the beginning of the new world order, there are some who believe that the very digital currencies might spell doom by accelerating global warming. The dissent against Bitcoin and other PoW based cryptocurrencies is fueled by the extent of mining operations. As the mining hardware continues to become more powerful, the mining difficulty rises proportionally to maintain a constant emission of new tokens.
An increase in mining difficulty also means increasing energy requirements. According to reports, the recent rise in Ethereum value has led to an increased interest among the cryptocurrency community members. Many people have taken up Ethereum mining using graphic processors.
The increasing demand for graphics processors has not only caused a scarcity of GPUs in the market. It has, in turn, increased the energy consumption. According to reports, the total energy consumed by the Bitcoin network has risen to 14.54 terawatt hours (TWh) per year. The energy requirement is expected to further grow with the growth of the community.
It puts the total amount of energy required to process each Bitcoin transaction at 163 kWh, equivalent to the amount of energy used by an average household in the United States for five and a half days. A further extrapolation puts the electricity consumption of Bitcoin network to be equivalent to the overall annual energy consumption of Turkmenistan, that ranks 81 in energy consumption ranking on a global scale.
While Bitcoin network takes the first place when it comes to overall energy consumption, Ethereum isnt far behind. According to the report, the total annual electricity requirement for Ethereum mining is equivalent to that of Moldova (with an energy consumption ranking on 120) at 4.69 TWh. Each Ether transaction uses an average of 49 kWh, which is equivalent to one and a half days worth of electricity for an average US household.
The upcoming Bitcoin scalability options and Ethereums impending switch from Proof of Work to Hybrid Proof of Stake algorithm may lead to a significant reduction in the electricity consumption trends.
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Cryptocurrency Electricity Requirements Surpasses Annual Energy Consumption of Few Nations - newsBTC
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