Fin Tech
Fin Tech
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FinTech
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FinTech Origins
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eBanking
• OnDeck (New York, 2007): small business
lender
• Kabbage (Atlanta, 2009): small business
lender
• Funding Circle (London, 2010): small
business lender
• Kreditech (Germany, 2012): instant lending
to individuals based on credit score
• BankMobile (New York, 2015): no-fee
online and mobile bank
• LendUp (San Francisco, 2011): payday
loans
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eBanking
• SoFi (Stanford Graduate School of
Business, 2011): student loan refinancing
5
Marketplace Lending
• Fintech + Sharing Economy + P2P
• Zopa (London, 2005)
• Lending Club (San Francisco, 2006)
• Prosper (San Francisco, 2006)
• Upstart (Palo Alto, 2012)
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Automated Financial Advisors
Algorithm-based financial advisors
• Betterment (New York, 2008)
• Personal Capital (Redwood City, 2009)
• Nutmeg (London, 2010)
• Wealthfront (Palo Alto, 2011)
• Charles Schwab‟s Intelligent Portfolios (2014)
• Coincube (New York, 2014): a robo-advising service
for Bitcoin
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Payments
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Trading Brokerage
• RobinHood (Palo Alto, 2013): mobile based
commission-free trading brokerage.
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Real Estate
• Nestio (New York, 2011): finding residential
rentals/ leasing and marketing platform for
residential landlords
• Point (Palo Alto, 2014): home equity
marketplace
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Automotive Retail
• Drive Shift (San Francisco, 2013)
• Beepi (Los Altos, 2013)
• Vroom (New York, 2013)
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And more…
• Float (Los Angeles, 2015): 24/7 mobile
digital credit
• Cumulus Funding (Chicago, 2011):
Income Share Agreements (receive
funds in exchange for a small
percentage of your income)
• Activehours (Palo Alto, 2012): provide
employees with immediate access to
accrued wages
• FlexWage (New Jersey, 2009): provide
employees with immediate access to
accrued wages
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Fraud Detection
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Mortgage
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Equity Crowdfunding
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Virtual Insurance Agents
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Fintech accelerators
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Fintech accelerators
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The Electronic Wallet
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Electronic Wallet
• The RFID era
• Sony's FeliCa in Japan (1996)
• Wal-Mart (2004): RFID mandatory on its suppliers
• Nokia 5140 (2004): the first GSM phone integrated
with RFID reading capability
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Electronic Wallet
• Billpoint (1998, backed by eBay, Wells
Fargo, Visa): person-to-person payment
• Paypal (2000)
• Payment by email
• Compatible with the physical world
(bank account and credit cards)
• No need to share bank account / credit
card information with merchants
• Verification (small-value deposit)
• Simplicity
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Electronic Wallet
• Paypal mafia
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Electronic Wallet
• The NFC era
• Sony and Philips/ NXP (2004): Near Field
Communication (NFC), a two-way wireless
technology for short-range communications
between electronic devices
• Blaze Mobile (2005, Berkeley): the NFC
payment sticker
• Nokia 6131 (2007): the first NFC phone
• Bling Nation (2007, Palo Alto): NFC sticker for
smartphones to charge purchases to a
Paypal account.
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Mobile Payment
• Mobile users carry a computer with them, not
just a phone. They even carry a GPS that
knows their location.
• Square (2009, Jack Dorsey): a "reader" that
allows anybody with a mobile phone to make a
payment and anybody with a mobile phone (and
a Square-provided "cash register") to accept it
(no cash, no credit cards, no RFID, no receipt).
• Stripe (2010, Patrick and John Collison)
• Supported by Visa and American Express
• Flint (2011): like Square but no hardware - just
scanning credit cards
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Mobile Payment
• Paypal Beacon (2013)
• Bluetooth-based technology that detects
Beacon-enabled phones when customers
enter a Beacon-enabled store and then
automate the purchase of merchandise
• Clinkle (2014, Palo Alto)
• Compatibility with every merchant
• Phone-to-phone payments via Aerolink
• WePay Clear (2014, Palo Alto): like Stripe but
fraud-free guarantee
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Mobile Payment
• Apple's iBeacon (2013)
• Bluetooth technology to alert devices of
the presence of fellow iBeacon devices.
• Apple Pay (2014) to make online
payments as secure as in-store payments
• Digital wallet incorporated directly into the
operating system
• SIM-independent secure memory chip, an
NFC radio, and a fingerprint reader.
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Mobile Payment
• Google Wallet (2011, replaced by Android Pay)
• Etc
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Mobile Payment
• The QR Age
• AliPay (2004)
• WeChat Pay
• LianLian Pay (2016)
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Mobile Payment
• Transition from brand-centric to consumer-centric
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Mobile Payment
• Peer-to-peer payment
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Mobile Payment
• Peer-to-peer payment
• WePay (Boston, 2008)
• Venmo (New York, 2009)
• GoCardless (London, 2011)
• nTrust (Canada, 2011)
• Square Cash (2013)
• SnapChat „s SnapCash (2014, based
on Square Cash)
• Google‟s new Wallet (plans to link
Google Wallet to Gmail but only on
Android)
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Mobile Payment
• Thanksgiving 2014: mobile devices outpace
personal-computers for online browsing
• 2015: 30% of all eCommerce traffic in the
USA comes from smartphones and tablets
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44 % 34
% %
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Mobile Payment
• 2016: Google Hands Free connects the
customer‟s phone with a point of sales
system so that the customer can pay without
pulling out the smartphone (same idea that
Square had)
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China
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Crowdfunding
“Crowdfunding will surpass VC as a
funding source in 2016” (Forbes)
Kickstarter (2008, San Francisco)
Indiegogo (2008, New York)
GoFundMe (2010, San Diego)
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Cryptography
• Post-quantum cryptography
• Zero-knowledge proofs
• Indistinguishability obfuscation
• Secure multi-party computation
• Bitcoin blockchain
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The Peer-to-peer World
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The Peer-to-peer World
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The Peer-to-peer World
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Cybercurrency
• DigiCash (David Chaum, 1990)
• E-gold (Douglas Jackson, 1996): 5 million
users by 2009 - shut down by the USA
• WebMoney (Russia, 1998)
• Tencent's qq coins (China, 2005) - shut
down by China
• Liberty Reserve (Costa Rica, 2006) - shut
down by the USA
• Perfect Money (Andrew Draper,
Switzerland, 2007)
• Bitcoin (2009) - decentralized!
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Cybercurrency
• 402 error code never implemented
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Cybercurrency
• Cynthia Dwork (1992): punish spammers
with computational processing, i.e.
computational processing is a cost
• Adam Back (1997): hashcash
(cryptographic hash functions on a
network, no need for central authority)
• Nick Szabo (1997): a distributed trust
model
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Cybercurrency
• Bitcoin
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Cybercurrency
• Bitcoin (2009)
• The first successful currency not to be
printed by a government
• A system capable of creating copies
that cannot be copied
• Peer-to-peer
• Bitcoin's distributed blockchain mechanism
makes central authorities of trust obsolete
• Virtually invulnerable to hacking (unlike
government databases)
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Cybercurrency
• Jan 2017: Bitcoin surges past $1000 for the first
time in 3 years
• Dec 2017: Bitcoin surges past $10,000 for the first
time
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How does Bitcoin work?
1. Download a software
wallet app
2. Buy bitcoins
3. Spend bitcoins
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Where can I use Bitcoin?
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Bitcoin
Enabling technologies:
distributed file sharing,
digital signature,
hashing,
and… blockchain
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Blockchain
The missing disruption
The world runs on three processes: storage,
computation, and communication.
The personal computer disrupted
computation.
The Internet disrupted communications.
Blockchain disrupts storage.
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Bitcoin
The blockchain is the main innovation of
Bitcoin
A blockchain contains every transaction
ever executed in the currency
The network shares a transaction book (or
public ledger)
Double-spending of bitcoins impossible
In order to add a new block to the Bitcoin
blockchain, a Bitcoin “miner” must include a
“proof of work”
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Bitcoin
The stack:
Blockchain (blocks maintained and
replicated by thousands of nodes)
Protocol (designed and maintained by
the open-source Bitcoin community or
Ethereum or other community)
Token (what are you exchanging?
money? cars? houses?)
Applications (wallets, services,etc)
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Bitcoin issues
A world currency administered not by a central
bank but by
Developers, whose software determines how
the currency is created and used
Miners, whose computers mint the currency
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Bitcoin issues
Bitcoin transactions take an average of ten
minutes to be confirmed
Scalability: capable of processing only
seven transactions per second.
Bitcoin runs on open source software
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Bitcoin issues
Solution: increase the block size - the
Bitcoin XT fork (Mike Hearn and Gavin
Andresen, 2014)… but all the computers on
the bitcoin network must install a new
version at the same time!
Solution: SegWit optimization (Pieter Wuille,
2015, adopted 2016) that increases the
volume of transactions fitting into a block
without increasing the block size (1 Mbyte)
Solution: 2 Mbyte block size (up from the
original 1 Mbyte) + "segregated witness"
code optimization – the Segwit2x fork (Jeff
Garzik, 2017)
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Alternative Cryptocurrencies
“Colored” currencies: user-issued
currencies running on the bitcoin
protocol
More than 70 in 2015
Cryptsy, the largest altcoin
exchange, lists hundreds of
cryptocurrencies
Omni/Mastercoin (JR Willett, 2013)
uses the same blockchain as
Bitcoin
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Alternative Cryptocurrencies
Different “proof of work” algorithms than
Bitcoin‟s SHA-256 (hence do not use
Bitcoin‟s blockchain):
Litecoin (former Google engineer
Charles Lee, 2011, second for market
capitalization in 2015)
PPCoin/Peercoin (“Sunny King”, 2012)
to replace mining with a less costly
(“green”) alternative, which evolved
into Primecoin (“Sunny King”, 2013)
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Mining
The process of adding transaction
records to the public ledger
“Proof of work”: a computing task
that is costly to execute but easy to
verify (SHA-256 computations)
Bitcoin mining implements a
distributed consensus system
Custom-built supercomputers are
needed for parallel processing
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Mining
Avalon (China,2012): the first ASIC
mining chip
BitFury (San Francisco, 2011):
16nm “green” ASIC chip that can
deliver 100 gigahash per second
(2015)
21 (San Francisco, 2013):
embeddable bitcoin mining chip
(2013) and the first computer with
native hardware and software
support for Bitcoin (2015)
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Mining
„Green‟ mining projects
Primecoin
Foldingcoin
Gridcoin
Zennet
Cloud-based mining: Genesis
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Bitcoin Banking
Cook Investment Firm (Andrew Cook,
Chile, 2011): world's largest bitcoin
investment fund (he founded it when he
was 20)
Epiphyte (San Francisco, 2013):
banking with crypto-currencies
NextBank (2015): the first all-bitcoin
institution
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Bitcoin Payment
CoinBase (San Francisco, 2012): bitcoin
wallet
Circle (Ireland, 2013): sending bitcoins
to friends and family
Quickcoin (San Francisco, 2014): a
Facebook-Integrated bitcoin wallet to
send bitcoins as messages
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Bitcoin BTM
CoinCloud (Menlo Park, 2014):
trading bitcoins for cash
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Life in the Bitcoin world
Exchange dollars for bitcoins and
viceversa: Coinbase (San
Francisco), Gemini (New York)
Personal wallet: software or
hardware
Software (“hot” wallet): Mycelium,
Breadwallet, Copay.io and Jaxx.io
Hardware: Keepkey, Trezor,
Ledger
Spend bitcoins, e.g. Purse.io that
allows to buy Amazon goods
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Blockchain Banking
BitShares/ Invictus Innovations
(Daniel Larimer, Virginia, 2013):
financial services (including
exchange and banking)
Based on blockchain but not the bitcoin
blockchain
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Blockchain goes mainstream
2017: Mastercard adopts blockchain
technology for cross-border payments
(no cryptocurrency though)
2017: IBM cross-border payments in the
South Pacific (using Stellar‟s
cryptocurrency Lumens)
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Blockchain Non-Banking Applications
Decentralised social messenger
Gems (Daniel Peled, Israel, 2014)
on bitcoin blockchain
Supply chain finance app Skuchain
(Mountain View, 2014)
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Blockchain applications
Smart Property
Everledger ledger tracks diamonds
Provenance.org tracks supply chain
authenticity
OpenBazaar decentralized Craigslist
exchange
Factom-HealthNautica securing medical
bills and claims
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Blockchain applications
Government
Identification documents
National ids
Visas
Voting registration
Sidekik
On-demand tele-attorney
Private police
Namecoin: decentralized DNS
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Blockchain applications
Physical and intellectual property can Smart property = property
whose ownership is
be registered and transacted via controlled via the Bitcoin
blockchain
blockchains as smart property
Smart Contract = a
Nick Szabo (1997): any contract (even program stored on the
governance) can be implemented as blockchain that can
automatically execute the
self-executing smart contracts terms of a contract (Ripple
Lab‟s Codius and
Ethereum)
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Smart Contracts
Agreements between parties posted to the
blockchain for automated execution
Every contract in human societies can be
reduced to a math problem
Smart contracts model patterns of
interaction in society
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Smart Contracts
Notary Service to register documents
Proof of Existence (2014)
Factom (Texas, 2014)
Empowered Law (Chicago, 2015)
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Smart Contracts
Register and transact IP (intellectual property):
Monegraph, Ascribe, …
Helping artists and writers protect their work
from copyright infringement
Easier than registering a work with the Library
of Congress
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Smart Contracts
Music Industry
Blockchain can usher in a new
era of digital rights management
(DRM)
Blockchain can reinvent the music
and media industry
No more piracy
Liberate musicians from music
labels and streaming services
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Smart Contracts
Music Industry
PeerTracks: an “artist equity
trading system”
Bittunes: an “independent music
market”
Ujo Music: global royalty
distribution and licensing
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Smart Contracts
Medical records
MedVault (2015): to record medical
information on the bitcoin blockchain
Factom‟s partnership with medical
services provider HealthNautica (2015)
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Smart Contracts
Medical records
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Applications beyond fintech all the way to governance
• Any kind of peer-to-peer contract can be implemented
as a secure and unbreakable blockchain application
• Computer algorithms can maintain order and trust
without the need for a government
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Filecoin (Juan Benet, 2017): earn filecoins for hosting
files on your computer, e.g. for offering storage to
those who need it
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Bitcoin 2.0 technologies for developing
decentralized applications (“app coins”):
• Counterparty
• Maidsafe
• Ethereum
• …
• Rootstock
• Tauchain
• …
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Ethereum (Vitalik Buterin, 2013)
• A platform to develop Bitcoin-like "currencies"
• A platform to develop secure digital contracts
• A platform to develop decentralized
applications
• Optimized version of the blockchain to save
storage space
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Ethereum
• Ethereum doesn't store massive data within
the blockchain itself
• It uses an additional component (originally
Swarm, later cancelled, now IPFS)
• Ethereum = Contracts (decentralized logic) +
Swarm/IPFS (decentralized storage) +
Whisper (decentralized messaging, under
development)
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Ethereum
• InterPlanetary File System/IPFS (Juan Benet,
2015) for decentralized storage (not Swarm)
• All data on IPFS are perpetually recorded
online via P2P distribution
• An encrypted address for each piece of
information
• A piece of information in IPFS cannot be
manipulated
• IPFS protocol replaces HTTP
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Ethereum
• Whisper (201?) for messaging
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Ethereum
• Ethereum is “Turing-complete“ (it can
implement any program)
• Vision of Ethereum as the "world computer"
• Most vulnerable to Ethereum: the
intermediaries (Amazon, Uber, Airbnb...)
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Bitcoin 2.0
Ethereum
• Criticism:
• Ethereum not designed for
distributed computing
• Ethereum designed for
consensus
• The blockchain was
designed to avoid
cheating: it was not
designed to be the
backend of a distributed
system
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Bitcoin 2.0
Ethereum
• United Nations helps
refugees in Jordan with
Ethereum (2017)
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Bitcoin 2.0
• Consensus Systems/ ConsenSys (Martin
Koeppelmann and Joseph Lubin, New
York, 2014)
• Custom “decentralized applications”
(dapps) for blockchain ecosystems on
top of Ethereum
• Spritzle/HitFin (Nathalie & Patrick Salami,
San Mateo, 2015)
• Ethereum-based platform for trading
derivatives
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Bitcoin 2.0
Counterparty (Chris DeRose, 2014)
A platform to foster the creation of P2P
financial apps on the blockchain
E.g., users can create their own currency
and set up exchanges of digital
currencies
Adds information to blockchain
transactions
89
Bitcoin 2.0
Swarm (Joel Dietz, Palo Alto, 2014): an
incubator of Counterparty projects; a
platform for launching Counterparty
projects and the initial mentorship and
funding; a crowdfunding platform for
creating decentralized apps
Storj (Shawn Wilkinson, Georgia, 2014), a
distributed peer-to-peer encrypted cloud
storage (similar to Dropbox but
distributed, like Swarm/IPFS but running
on Counterparty instead of Ethereum)
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Bitcoin 2.0
Counterpart uses the bitcoin blockchain
Ethereum uses a non-bitcoin blockchain
Non-blockchain consensus: Ripple
Ripple (2013): secure and instant global
financial transactions with no chargebacks
(2016: third-largest cryptocurrency by
market capitalization after bitcoin and
ethereum) - based on a trust graph, not a
blockchain
91
Bitcoin 2.0
Other platforms for easy decentralization
of applications:
Eris (New York, 2014)
Founded by two lawyers, Preston
Byrne & Casey Kuhlman
A universal blockchain platform
It can clone Ethereum, Bitcoin and
many other blockchains
A blockchain is a database, and each
user should have its own
Uses IPFS for storage
92
Bitcoin 2.0
Other platforms for easy decentralization
of applications:
Ripple‟s Codius (San Francisco, 2013)
– non blockchain
Etherparty (Los Angeles, 2015): cloud-
based, no programming required (runs
on Ethereum)
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DLTs
Beyond the Bitcoin blockchain
Beyond the blockchain
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DLTs
2014: Evan Duffield's Xcoin/Dash
faster than Bitcoin and has lower fees
than Bitcoin
built-in governance via a second-tier
network ("masternodes")
2015: the first decentralized governance
system, the Dash Budget System
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DLTs
Dash & Arizona State Univ
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DLTs
2013: BCNext's NXT
"proof of stake" method instead of the
"proof of work" method
no mining
a platform to build financial applications
2015: NEM
"proof of importance" method (PhD
thesis of Makoto Takemiya)
Eigentrust reputation system (Sep
Kamvar, Mario Schlosser & Hector
Garcia-Molina at Stanford)
97
DLTs
2017: Arthur & Kathleen Breitman‟s Tezos
Democracy on the blockchain: each token is a vote
"proof of stake" method but even that can be subject
to a democratic vote
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Blockchain-as-a-service
Azure by Microsoft
Ardor by Jelurida, founded by Petko
Petkov (a core developer of NXT) and Lior
Yaffe
Stratis, founded in 2016 in Philadelphia.
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DLTs
Blockchain vs DAG
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DLTs
Iota, designed for micro-transactions
(Serguei Popov et al)
A "directed acyclic graph" (or DAG),
known as a "tangle", instead of a
blockchain
2015: Sergio Demian Lerner's DagCoin
replaces blocks with DAGs
each user that transacts becomes
automatically a miner
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DLT development
Graphene
Scorex
Tendermint
Ripple/Stellar
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DLT development
Meta-languages for smart contracts
Solidity
Serpent
Viper
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Dapps
The smart contract is the simplest form of
decentralized automation
Decentralized Application: a smart contract
with an unlimited number of participants
(e.g., Tor, BitTorrent, MaidSafe)
Decentralized Applications are smart
contracts
No server: the blockchain serves as the
"backend"
No centralized intermediary
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Beyond the Internet
MaidSafe (David Irvine, Britain, 2006)
To decentralize the Internet leveraging the
enormous amount of unused hard-disk space
that exists around the world combined with peer-
to-peer protocols and encryption
No central servers, no central databases
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Beyond the Internet
MaidSafe
MAID (Massive Array of Independent Disks)
SAFE (Secure Access For Everyone)
Data are shredded and heavily encrypted, and
the encrypted chunks are randomly distributed
around the world
Only the owner can reassemble and decrypt
these chunks
No blockchain: not a "proof of work" ("mining")
algorithm but a "proof of resource" mechanism
Transactions are not stored in a blockchain: no
traces of that transaction exist except with the
two parties involved
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Beyond the Internet
MaidSafe
MaidSafe rewrites the Internet
SafeNet: a Tor-like platform that decentralizes all
the services currently available on the Internet
(messaging, email, social networks, data
storage, video conferencing, etc); i.e. it makes
them work without any need for servers and
databases
The final solution to the problems of identity theft
and surveillance
107
Beyond the Internet
MaidSafe
A P2P-based system for storage and routing
Decentralized storage a` la Storj: "farmers" offer
spare storage to the network
A crowd-sourced Internet
A browser that lets people browse HTML pages
securely and anonymously
The user can log into any computer of the
network and the computer becomes "her"
computer: her data, her applications, her profile.
When she logs out, no trace of her work is left
behind.
108
Smart Law
The traditional world: legally-binding
Flexible interpretation of the law, rhetorical
power of attorneys
The blockchain world: technologically-
binding
Software inexorably executes the contract no
matter what
Auto-executing code replaces lawyers,
courtrooms, judges and prisons
No need for a legal system if the world
moves to smart contracts
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Initial Coin Offerings
2014: First ICO (Karmacoin)
2017: Filecoin‟s record ICO
2017: China bans ICOs
110
Governance 2.0
DAOs (Decentralized Autonomous
Organizations)
An unmanned organization
under the control of an
incorruptible algorithm
The algorithm is, in turn, a
publicly auditable open-source
software
DAOs are autonomous
DAOs are self-enforcing
DAOs have no central control
111
Governance 2.0
Bitnation (Susanne Tarkowski Tempelhof, 2014)
a platform to create DAOs
"Create Your Own Nation In 140 Lines Of
Code"
does not involve central authorities
a collaborative platform for DIY government
provides the same services that traditional
governments provide, but in a decentralized
way
112
Governance 2.0
DAO (Slock.it, 2016)
the DAO raises the equivalent of
$150m to invest in startups
14% of all ether ever issued on
Ethereum
Largest crowdfunding project of all
times
113
Governance 2.0
Distributed Collaborative Organizations
2014: Primavera De Filippi (Harvard Univ)
and Houman Shadab (New York Law of
School) invented an LLC-like organization for
blockchain organizations
Integration of blockchain-based distributed
organizations (DAOs) with the existing legal
system
114
Governance 2.0
Gates Foundation‟s distributed ledger
Lo3energy‟s Brooklyn Microgrid
115
Identity
A new breed of apps and services will grow on
top of a cross-chain system of decentralized
identifiers linked to identity hubs encoded with
semantic data
116
China
A national prioritity (13th Five-Year National
Informatization Plan, 2015)
117
Blockchain Ecosystem in 2017
startups
118
Blockchain education
Blockchain University (Mountain View, 2014)
Institute for Blockchain Studies (Melanie
Swan, 2014)
Hyperledger Project (Linux Foundation,
2016): a joint effort to advance blockchain
technology (IBM, Accenture, Intel, Fujitsu,
Hitachi, etc)
The technology is almost entirely open-
source
119
Blockchain education
2016: $1 billion invested by Wall Street
120
Blockchain art
121
Bibliography
122
Contact
www.scaruffi.com
See http://www.scaruffi.com/singular/human20.html
for the full text of this discussion 123