Tuesday 31 July 2018

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Crypto comeback

Satoshi's first collaborator returns, a bank has trouble innovating, footballers will livestream for tokens
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July 31, 2018
A REAL BITCOIN O.G.: Martti "Sirius" Malmi, one of the first coders to work alongside Satoshi Nakamoto, revealed the new project he's working on exclusively to CoinDesk. 

A new cryptocurrency called AXE is designed to fuel his new global project of creating a decentralized web, combining Malmi's Identifi online reputation system with database system GUN. 

GUN is building decentralized social networks, akin to Reddit and YouTube, and Identifi adds a censorship-resistant identity layer. The project seeks no less than to disrupt the likes of Google and Facebook. Full Story

CAN'T TOUCH THIS: BBVA ran into a problem while trying to innovate with distributed ledger technology, underscoring the roadblocks faced by forward-thinking incumbents. 

The Spanish multinational bank negotiated a corporate loan on a private Hyperledger blockchain and wanted to use the public ethereum ledger to notarize the agreements. But doing so would require purchasing a small amount of ether, and regulators have sent mixed signals on whether this was permissible.

So the bank just used an ethereum testnet to anchor the data, which is a bit like making a handprint in sand on the beach instead of wet cement on the sidewalk. Full story

GAMIFYING THE GAME: The National Football League Players Association (NFLPA) plans to launch a blockchain platform for players to share commentary, livestreams and other content.

FanChan is a product of a blockchain startup SportsCastr, and it’s expected to let the athletes earn additional income through broadcasting exclusive content to their fans, who will be able to subscribe and then reward players with tokens. Full story  


Do you HODL or SPEDN? The double edged sword of crypto is that usage leads to price increasing but also could result in a loss of investment gains.

We asked our audience in the latest State of Blockchain Sentiment Survey about this issue. 70 percent thought HODLing was more important while 30 percent took the opposite opinion.

We also asked how frequently CoinDesk readers spend their coins, and the results reveal that almost no one uses their crypto on a regular basis. 

Interestingly, bitcoin was the most spent coin, with only 73% of respondents saying they spend their bitcoin “almost never.” For comparison, 82% ethereum users and 89% of litecoin users “almost never” spend their coins.

These results could indicate that bitcoin users are more likely to spend their crypto, but it could also reflect that certain coins have more merchants or apps.

Find more insights in CoinDesk's Q2 State of Blockchain report. More research
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BEARS UNCHAINED: Bitcoin is changing hands at $7,760 on Bitfinex Tuesday, down 4.5 percent in the last 24 hours, and the current volatility level makes a further sharp decline possible. Full story
BEST OF THE BEST

For a thoughtful reflection on bitcoin's history and the different ways the community has viewed it over the years, take some time to read this blog post by Hasufly and Nic Carter.    

There have been multiple approaches to what bitcoin is and how we can use it: an experiment, a cheap p2p payments network, a censorship-resistant digital gold, a darknet currency, a reserve currency for the crypto industry, a programmable shared database and, lastly, an uncorrelated financial asset viewed as an investment vehicle. 

Some of these concepts are bitterly incompatible with each other, like the concept of cheap payments versus that of a digital gold. And in the future, we may see a battle between proponents of anonymity and advocates of a transparent, KYC and AML-complaint bitcoin, the authors suggest.      

THE REST

BLOOMBERG:
 The wire service offers a grim take on the prospects for enterprise blockchain vendors.

Forrester Research estimates that up to 90 percent of current corporate blockchain experiments will never become a part of real everyday operations. Some big companies now are delaying the planned release of their DLT systems. 

Likewise, Gartner found that only 1 percent of CIOs reported any blockchain adoption in their firms and only 8 percent had plans or ongoing experiments with the technology. 

NEW YORK TIMES: Columnist and longtime cryptocurrency doubter Paul Krugman explains his continued skepticism about the space: monetary systems like bitcoin appear to be too expensive and complicated in his view.

"Instead of money created by the click of a mouse, we have money that must be mined — created through resource-intensive computations," the economist writes. 

Krugman comes to the conclusion that the black market is going to be the only place to use cryptocurrencies in the near future. Cue those fax machine memes.

MOTHERBOARD: California law enforcement reported they had caught a 20-year-old college student who had been robbing crypto investors using a technique known as SIM-swapping.

Joel Ortiz allegedly stole around $5 million in cryptocurrencies this year, before getting arrested at Los Angeles International Airport on his way to Europe.

Police said Ortiz tricked cell phone service providers to transfer the victims’ phone numbers to his SIM card and then hijacked their Gmail accounts and got access to their crypto accounts. 
 


We've launched our new podcast, Late Confirmation, which are the top stories in the blockchain world, delivered daily from the team at CoinDesk, sponsored by Oxford Fintech Programme. 

Listen to Latest Episode and Subscribe
 

WHO WON #CRYPTOTWITTER

 
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Monday 30 July 2018

Snug as a Zug

Blockchain-friendly jurisdictions compared; paying employees in bitcoin; an "app store" for enterprise DLT
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July 30, 2018
DECENTRALIZING WORK? Misthos, a new multi-signature bitcoin wallet created on top of Blockstack's platform, could point the way toward future models of employment that reflect the ethos of crypto.

The wallet is designed to distribute income between members of project teams, investment partnerships and other ad hoc ventures. Misthos requires that every payout be unanimously approved by partners of the venture, replacing traditional contracts and salaries with team consensus about the value of individual contributions.   

"It helps us create a transparent environment where contributions are rewarded fairly and democratically," said Marcel Kasper of Coin Trainer, a German bitcoin publication that is already using Misthos. Some deliberations, however, inevitably must happen offline, experts say. Full story

ONE-STOP SHOP: IBM and the currency trading utility CLS today unveiled LedgerConnect, a blockchain "app store" which boasts megabanks Barclays and Citigroup among its nine founding members.

The platform is designed to be a hub of DLT-based services for banks for such purposes as know-your-customer processes, sanctions screening, collateral management, derivatives post-trade processing and reconciliation and market data.  Full Story

NEW PLACE FOR DAPPS: A team of former Alibaba employees have raised $20 million for Ultrain, a platform for dApps.

The combined token and equity sale attracted such investors as token funds Draper Dragon, FBG Capital, DanHua VC and Arrington XRP Capital; blockchain startups Bixin and OKCoin; and VC funds Morningside Capital and Ceyuan Capital.

Launched in October 2017, Ultrain is said to process 3,000 transactions per second on a testnet. Full story  


Q2 saw $1.1 bn in venture capital funding for blockchain firms and 178 deals. Compared to last quarter, funding grew by 24 percentage points and deal count by 18 percentage points.

All-time venture funding in the blockchain space has reached a cumulative $4.3 bn, which is almost a quarter of the cumulative ICO total. About three quarters of venture activity occurs in rounds of $10 mn or less.

The biggest deals were for miner and mining equipment manufacturer Bitmain, at an estimated $300 mn, and crypto mobile payment platform Circle, at $110 mn.

A more novel funding method that hybridizes ICOs and VC is the Simple Agreement for Future Tokens (SAFT) and it's becoming more common. 37 SAFT deals resulted in about $304 mn in Q2 funding.

The top geographic areas for total SAFT activity are San Francisco ($289 mn), Austin ($126 mn), Grand Cayman ($97 mn), and Waterloo ($50 mn).

Learn these insights and more in CoinDesk's Q2 State of Blockchain report. More research
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The Oxford Fintech Programme gives you the tools you need to build the future of transactions and commerce. In this online fintech programme, you'll explore emerging technologies that will disrupt marketplaces and financial services, and examine the state of the industry and plan disruptive intra- or entre-preneurial interventions. 

Find Out More
 
BEARS PACIFIED: Bitcoin is changing hands at $8,170 on Bitfinex, and technical charts show room for a rally to recent highs above $8,500. Full story
BEST OF THE BEST

NEW YORK TIMES: The paper offers an overview of the most crypto-friendly jurisdictions and what they offer to blockchain entrepreneurs.

Bermuda, Malta, Gibraltar, Liechtenstein and, of course, the famous Swiss canton of Zug, are competing for the title of a blockchain heaven now, introducing new regulations for ICOs and cryptocurrency trading while the traditional leaders in world finance deliberate and dither.    

THE REST

BLOOMBERG:
Mike Novogratz’s crypto merchant bank will soon be listed on a Toronto stock exchange after months navigating regulatory thickets. But he sounds kind of lukewarm about the debut, given how the markets changed while he was awaiting approval. 

“Unfortunately, the Canadian capital markets aren’t roaring anymore," Novogratz told Bloomberg. “I have faith that they will come back."

FORTUNE: Ahead of Bitmain's coming IPO in Hong Kong, the magazine obtained internal financial documents showing that the company made $1.1 billion in the first quarter of 2018, almost equal to the 2017 total of $1.2 billion.

A conservative estimate from the magazine’s source is that Bitmain could make $2 billion to $3 billion for the full year.

JACOBITE MAGAZINE: Sonya Mann, a former tech journalist who works for the Zcash Foundation, offers a philosophical take on the impact of cryptocurrency on society.

Comparing oppressive states and centralized financial systems to an abusive spouse, she writes that someone who feels trapped in such a relationship has two options: voice or exit, i.e. speaking up for your rights or building an alternative. P2P networks such as crypto offer an exit of sorts.
 


We've launched our new podcast, Late Confirmation, which are the top stories in the blockchain world, delivered daily from the team at CoinDesk, sponsored by Oxford Fintech Programme. 

Listen to Latest Episode and Subscribe
 

WHO WON #CRYPTOTWITTER

 
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Sunday 29 July 2018

Tame yourself

A blueprint for reforming the crypto token market
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CoinDesk Weekly is sponsored by 


July 29, 2018
Time to grow up
 
The Token Alliance, an initiative of the Chamber of Digital Commerce, has laid out a set of guidelines for token sponsors and regulators to meet in the middle. It's just what the industry needs to move beyond the fringe, writes Michael J. Casey.   
 
Read more in THE TAKEAWAY below.


 
TOP TRENDS ON COINDESK
 
ETF watch

Chatter about an upcoming decision by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over whether to approve a rule change that would allow bitcoin-based exchange traded funds (ETFs) has certainly made headlines this week, though it isn’t the first time such a proposal has crossed the agency’s desk.

The proposal in question submitted on June 20 and later released to the public for comment attracted a total of 250 different voices all weighing in on the pros and cons of a bitcoin ETF.

The overwhelming majority of the opinions raised to the SEC urged immediate action, claiming that a regulatory approval would change crypto markets for the better, making them a safer, more trustworthy space for investors.

But for all the talk, the SEC’s response has been rather sluggish, given that the agency said a decision on an even earlier bitcon ETF proposal made back in January would have to be postponed until September.  

While it has yet to be confirmed whether the one put forth by the Chicago Board Options Exchange (Cboe) and SolidX in June will similarly be postponed past August, the SEC did issue a second rejection on still yet another bitcoin ETF proposal by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss.

Nevertheless, the SEC will have to act soon given that continuing uncertainty over regulatory approval for a bitcoin ETF seems to be encouraging even more proposals on the matter, with one crypto company announcing this week it would seek ETF approval for not only bitcoin but the top ten cryptocurrencies in the market.


Dangerous times

The latest apps on the world’s second most popular blockchain, ethereum, have been gaining attention as of late for promoting risky, and in some cases, flat-out lethal behavior.

The nature of decentralized applications (dapps) such as FOMO 3D and PoWH3D, which are two of ethereum’s top performing apps, attract users with “pay-per-bid auction models” akin to Ponzi schemes where value is only generated so long as new users keep joining.

Meanwhile, Augur, the decentralized prediction market platform where users bet on the outcomes of real-world events, has taken a dark turn. Some have begun to bet on the possible deaths, and more specifically murders, of certain high-profile individuals such as politicians and celebrities.

While the brazen activity on ethereum has raised concerned eyebrows, developers of the platform such as Alex Van de Sande maintain that dapps, broadly, are an integral part of advancing both the blockchain industry and the broader vision of a decentralized Internet.


Eye on China

China has been in the headlines this week for a number of different developments, both favorable and otherwise to crypto enthusiasts.

The week began with confirmation from authorities in the Xinjiang Uyghur region over rumored efforts to shut down unauthorized bitcoin mining operations with the help of local utility companies. Indeed, utility companies are now tasked with eliminating all bitcoin mining activity not formally registered with the government by the end of August or face consequences by Chinese authorities.

Then came news of a blockchain fund valued at $1 billion losing support from the Hangzhou city government, which had reportedly agreed to contribute around $4 million to the fund back in April.

At the same time, a different blockchain-related investment fund, valued at $1.4 billion, announced it had been rather successful in gaining municipal support in the city of Nanjing.

The Nanjing government is set to contribute 30% of the total fund aimed specifically at early-stage blockchain startups and participating academic institutions.

What’s more, new private-sector blockchain ventures seem to be proliferating in China.

For example, one of country's oldest and most popular social networking platforms known as Tianya Club announced this week a release date for its blockchain-based Tianyan Token (TYT).

Meanwhile, software company YLZ Info confirmed development of a blockchain-based vaccine monitoring system in partnership with Alibaba's payment affiliate, Ant Financial.

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The Oxford Fintech Programme gives you the tools you need to build the future of transactions and commerce. In this online fintech programme, you’ll explore emerging technologies that will disrupt marketplaces and financial services, and examine the state of the industry and plan disruptive intra- or entre-preneurial interventions.

Find Out More

QUOTE OF THE WEEK
 
"[T]he Commission's interpretation and application of the statutory standard sends a strong signal that innovation is unwelcome in our markets, a signal that may have effects far beyond the fate of bitcoin ETPs."

– SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, dissenting about the decision to reject the Winklevoss ETF proposal.

Michael J. Casey is the chairman of CoinDesk's advisory board and a senior advisor for blockchain research at MIT's Digital Currency Initiative.

The token industry needs to grow up.

I’m not talking about financial growth, at least not for now. With $20 billion raised in “initial coin offerings” and an overall token market valuation of $300 billion, early participants in crypto finance have done a spectacular job of “growing” their monetary value as measured by the very fiat currencies many claim are being disrupted.

But if digital tokens are to matter, and if they are to enable networks of distributed trust, the industry needs to advance to adulthood.

Only with a self-regulating system — in which broadly accepted norms of behavior, modes of communication and business practices are encouraged — can the industry shake off a Wild West image of Lambo-loving scammers and move from the fringe to the mainstream.

This, by the way, is also the only way to experience true and meaningful financial growth by which opportunities are distributed beyond a small set of early adopters to a wider array of participants in the $100 trillion world economy.

As such, it is encouraging to see proactive efforts to promote best practices. The most recent such effort comes from the Token Alliance, an industry initiative of the Digital Chamber of Commerce that comprises 350 global industry participants, including blockchain and token experts, technologists, economists, former regulators, and practitioners from over 20 law firms.

On Monday, the Alliance will release its first white paper, one that aims to bring two important constituencies — industry leaders and regulators – into alignment around the appropriate business and legal treatment of digital token issuances.

In particular, it seeks clarity for tokens that are not intended as investment contracts — typically those that have a "utility" value in driving a decentralized network of users — and for that reason, deserve to be excluded from existing securities laws.

According to a foreword from Token Alliance co-chairs Jim Newsome, a former CFTC Chairman, and Paul Atkins, a former SEC commissioner, the principles outlined in the report “are designed to help market participants understand the parameters around their activity and to act in a fair and responsible manner toward potential purchasers.”

At the same time, Newsom and Atkins add that these guidelines can help policymakers understand the technology better so as to avoid drafting draconian rules, potentially creating “an environment of regulatory arbitrage, or even worse, unintentionally decrease the attractiveness of a jurisdiction regarding innovation and jobs creation.”

It takes two...

The key point here is that this is two-way street.

On the one hand, policymakers clearly need educating – as highlighted by Rep. Brad Sherman’s ludicrous suggestion to ban bitcoin during Congressional hearings a week and a half ago.

But on the other hand, regulators are going to be much more willing to give the industry the regulatory space it needs to flourish if there isn’t widespread public anger over unsavory and exploitative behavior in the crypto community.

As smugly satisfying as it was to read all the “Old Man Yells at Cloud” memes that mocked Sherman, his and other lawmakers’ misplaced proposals were prompted by some pretty shoddy industry behavior, especially in the initial coin offerings (ICOs) market.

Assessments of ICOs have concluded that as many as two-thirds of those in 2017 were scams. Notably, the lament heard most widely and vociferously about this problem is from within the crypto community itself, with serious developers complaining constantly about “shitcoins” and “vaporware” projects raising eight-, nine-, even ten-figure amounts without building a single thing.

Some in the community would much prefer that the whole "ICO" thing would go away. (In all fairness, "ICO" really is a terrible term, one that immediately labels tokens as purely a money-raising enterprise, substitutable for an IPO.)  They want the world to recognize the relative purity of bitcoin and perhaps a smattering of other fully mined altcoins. (Ether is usually excluded from this list.) They view bitcoin and its ilk as the only true censorship-resistant systems, neither reliant on third parties to operate nor at risk of being shut down by regulators.

But token issuance can’t be wished away. It’s here to stay.

Irrespective of the debated legal distinctions between “securities” and “utility tokens,” sales of these digital assets have already proven to be an effective way to bootstrap the development of decentralized networks and decentralized applications (dapps) that thrive within them. It’s not clear whether pure cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, bogged with scaling challenges, will ever have the capability to support the smart contract functionality that dapps require.

The case for self-regulation

Once you accept the premise that ICOs are here to stay, it should also be apparent that in order to flourish they must operate within a constructive legal framework.

This is not to say that token projects shouldn’t be disruptive, but it is an acknowledgement of the need for pragmatism. It should be possible for crypto developers and entrepreneurs to hold true to their disruptive, decentralizing, and anti-corporate principles yet also foster a less cynical, more realistic relationship with government.

The best route to a constructive legal framework is to foster a reliable, structured system of self-regulation, which can be designed to soften the compliance blow for startups. Most of the responsibility for boosting public confidence in the technology should rest with industry participants rather than law enforcement but fall within a predictable legal framework. We must develop standards of accountability, attestation, reputation and certification (decentralized or otherwise) that weed out bad actors from the market and do so in a way that gives regulators confidence that the social objectives that define their mission are being upheld.

This is the basic principle behind self-regulatory organizations (SROs) at regulated exchanges and traditional certifying bodies in finance such as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). This is not to say the crypto industry should follow these heavy-handed approaches, which are rightly criticized for overly protecting incumbents. Rather, it is to say with the help of the kind of transparency and accountability offered by blockchain technology and crypto innovations such as multi-signature custody, an opportunity exists to build institutions that foster both public confidence and startup-led innovation.

For this self-regulatory approach to succeed, the authors of the Token Alliance paper argue what is vital is for governments to provide a supportive legal framework. Here, in their bid to educate regulators, they favorably describe the approach applied in the U.K. territory of Gibraltar, which requires “adequate, accurate, and balanced disclosure of information to enable anyone considering purchasing digital tokens to make an informed decision.”

The section on Gibraltar's forward-looking framework for token regulation stands in stark contrast to preceding sections, which cover evolving legal approaches in Australia, Canada, the U.K. and the U.S. Taken together, these paint a picture of continued uncertainty and contradictory perspectives.

On the industry education side, the Token Alliance paper takes a decent stab at laying down principles for how development teams that take on the role of “token sponsor” should bring their tokens into the world if they are to avoid having to comply with securities law.

Some of these proposed principles will be unwelcome to teams who’ve viewed ICOs as get-rich-quick opportunities. The authors argue, for example, that sponsors’ white papers “should avoid discussion of any allocation of tokens for investors, developers, founders, or employees, “ since these facts would be more relevant to an investor than a token user, highlighting the token’s vulnerability to being regulated as a security.

This, however, is the price of growing up and it's a price worth paying. – Michael J. Casey



Beyond CoinDesk...

WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING

BBC: The devastating effect of Hurricane Maria on Puerto Rico set off a series of unlikely events that has led to what some would consider a “blockchain boom” on the island.

In a 27-minute podcast, BBC reporter Rafael Abuchaibe explains why some residents are looking to blockchain as the road back to financial prosperity for Puerto Rico.
 
BLOOMBERG: What are people actually using their bitcoin for?

Bloomberg quotes new figures from Coinmetrics claiming as much as two-thirds of total transaction activity on the blockchain has nothing to do with trading or purchase of goods, but rather a host of other "non-economic" activities such as mixing coins or spamming the network.  

FORBES: Have you ever heard of a diet high in fat? The Keto diet dates back to the 1920’s and is reportedly gaining traction among crypto enthusiasts today for having a “counterculture feel” able to spark “superhuman mental abilities. 
 
HANDELSBLATT: Germany’s energy market is potentially gearing up for a blockchain revolution, according to this German news publication that recounts the many potential use cases for the technology as it relates to the country's diversified power industry.

WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO

We've launched our first podcast, Late Confirmation. Subscribe and listen to our daily recap of the top stories in the blockchain world.

And make sure to read our newly released State of Blockchain Q2 2018 report, a deep dive with more than 100 slides analyzing the trends and forces that are shaping the industry.

For real-time price updates and technical market analysis, follow  @CoinDeskMarkets. And everyone interested in keeping up with this fascinating and rapidly evolving field of technology should follow our main Twitter handle, @CoinDesk

Send feedback on this newsletter to marc@coindesk.comThanks for reading! Until next week...


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